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                  <text>••-, "'' ""'")' Ot!RLmel, MlaGieport-t•omeroy, 0.,

August22, 1972
•

NowYouk.,w

Fischer Issues lntimatum Today
REYKJAVIK, Iceland (UP!)
-U.S. challenger Bobby Fischer issued an ultimatum
today saying he would quit the
world chess championship if
the games were not moved Into
a private room or if conditions
in the main hall were riot
a&lt;lapted to his demands.
In a letter to German arbiter
Lothar Schmid, Fischer said if
his demands were not met and

another forfeit took place he
would "consider the match
summarily terminated and
there will be no further play
Wlder any coriditions."
Fischer has fought a threeweek battle to force what he
would consider improvements
in conditions in the 3,000 seat
exhibition hall. He said he
could hear people coughing,
laughing, whispering, unwrapping candy and children
running around.

VOL XXIV NO. 9!

PROMOTED - Ptl. Roger Hyden, right, has been.
promoted to sergeant according to an aMouncement today
by the Ohio State Highway Patrol. Hyden, a member of the
Gallia-Meigs Post State Highway Patrol Post for the past
three years, has been transferred to the Jackson Post State
Highway Patrol. Sgt. Hyden, a native of Jackson ColUlty, has
been with the patrol the past six and one baH years. Prior to
that, he played minor league baseball in the CinciMati Reds

ELBERFELDS IN POMEROY

Farm System. Ptl. Richard Taff, left, a 1969 graduate of the
Ohio Highway Patrol Academy, and native of Lewislield,
Ohio, has been transferred to Gallipolis. He will replace
Hyden. Tall has been at Canfield, Ohio the past three years.
He attended Kent State University one year and spent two
months in the United States Army. They are flanked by Lt.
Ernest Wigglesworth, Commander of the Gallia-Meigs Post.

HEADQUARTERS FOR LEE WORK CLOJlfES

nephews.

.,

Friends may call at Ewing
Funeral Hom e any time .
Burial will be in Rock Springs
Cemetery.

You should see the fine
selection of Lee Work
Clothes in the busy
Men's Department at
Elberfelds. Bib overalls
in carpenters, painters
or plain blue denim
styles. Lee Tech Twill
matched work sets, Lee
work caps in your
favorite style Lee
dungarees of blue
denim - lee coveralls
In shorts, regulars and
longs - lee blue denim
overall jackets, lined or
unlined , zipper front
style or longer length
lee
button front nylon quilted work
jackets - Lee Rider
denim dungarees - lee
Rider western denim
jackets. And you'll find
your. correct size, too,
from the smallest to the
extra, extra large.

Kroger Building New Plaza Super Store
Kroger Food Stores today
formally announced a new
27,104 square foot super store,
under construction in the Silver
Bridge Shopping Plaza. The
new shopping plaza is located
at Ohio State Route 7 and U.S.·
Route 35 in Gallipolis Township, Ohio.
B. G. Beaty, Charleston

division vice president, said

the new store will contain over
twice the square footage of a
normal supermarket.
Beaty said the new Silver
Bridge Super Store will have a
new look starting with the
exterior decor, which will
include un arch ca nopy sup.

BY JACK O'BRIAN
HAS FROST COOLED IT
.
WITH DIAHANN?
NEW YORK (KFS)
Showbiz
osychologists think Diahann Carroll's dates
with a record exec mean the David Frost idyll
defrosted .. . Danny WoHe's desperate attempts
to reconcile with Aliza Kashi fell on deaf shelllike ears ... In "21" NBC's Girl for Today,
Barbara Walters, recently separated, dined
with RCA Chairman Bob Sarnoff ... Chicago
billionaire Clement Stone, who gave the '68
Nixon campaign a full million-dollar push, is ·
being mentioned as our next ambassador to
England; he could have had it last time but
refused all ·political plwns.
As a TV guest, Bette Davis is tough, wise
and gracious ... Has a kirid of free..swinging
candor that reminds us of Eleanor Holm ...
Years ago we dined with Eleanor and Billy
Rose, the guests also including Bennett Cerf,
Oscar Hammersteln :&gt;nd, the Dewitt(Reader's
Digest) Wallaces, the composer Chester Conns,
and everyone commented on the great grub ...
Billy stuffily ordered the butler to "give my
regards to the chef;" which momentary embarrassment at the pretentiousness among the
guests was alleviated by Eleanor advising
Billy : "Ah, shaddup! " .. . One dinnertime
Eleanor was extremely gracious to playwright
Ferenc Molnar, and because of his heavy accent
was pronouncing each word with precise
slowness ... Molnar smiled: "But my dear
Eleanor, you are talking to me as if I am a
puppy." ... The most civilized part of Rose's life
was his decade wed to Eleanor.
Actress Carol Lynley and her ex-husband
Mike Selaman have a hassle over alimony ...
Woody Allen didn't like it too much when Steve
Allen hogged the piano ' for 20 minutes at
Michael's Pub where Woody's clarinet is the
once-a -weekly come-on .. . Big band virtuosi

por ted by brick columns. Once
inside the customer will find an
expanded delicatessen, high·
lighted with a wood-shingle
roof and acce nted with gold
bittersweet colored ligh ted
panels. The deli ca tessen will
offer a wide variety of items
includ ing fresh baked pies and
doughnuts. ·

Peewee Irwin and Chris Griffin daylight running a music school in northern New Jersey; let
their pupils knoiv - they know, they know ! ...
Arlene Dahl, wh o has the proper
pulchritudinous credentials, says "American
women are crazy . They shower so much their
skins dry out." Arlene's cleaning up as Sears'
beauty expert. But Sears also sells showers,
Arlene .
Why does Andy Warhol love Jackie's sister
"Princess" Lee Radziwill. Because she rented
his Long Island estate at a nifty price ... The Leo
Durochers at Top of the Park resta urant said
they're looking for a home in Palm Springs ...
Leo's baseball -' pension is one of the biggest in
baseball history ... Backgrunmon champ Tim
Holland (he once, which was enough, was wed to
Jobany Carson 's new no doubt eternal flame
Joanna Holland ) formed the lnt'l Backgammon
Ass'n with Serge Obolensky and Hugh Hefner ...
It's hotter than chess in most places : London's
Clermont Club bas games at $2,500 a point and stakes double and redouble.
"Badge 373" unreels a dope raid here which
turns into a million-dollar gun smuggling
racket. It's based on fact, but names were
changed to protect the federal undercover man
.. . The Tall Texan legend suffered a trifle in
Ireland: the John Barleycorn pub owner here,
Terry O'Neill, also owns one in Cork and has a
Texas-born bartender there, name of Courtney
- who is just four-eleven ... The French interior
director Zsa Zsa hired as secretary was mentioned as being merely Zsa's male escort, so she
solved that one : fired him ... Redheaded Jill St.
John bought a couple of incognitos at Michel
Kazan's - a blonde and a brunette wig ...
Famous young stage..screen actress at Jimmy
Weston's had a plate of steak thumbits for
openers, a T-bone for her entree and a filet
mignon as dessert. Her musician mate almost
clinkered.

Veterans Memorial Hospital
ADMISSIONS - Ri chard
Freeman, Pomeroy; Franklin
Roush, Minersv ille; Floyd
Brewer, Rutland; Phyllis
Spear,, Syra cuse: Sue Seelig,
Pomeroy: Kathy Newe ll ,
Ches ter, and Mark Ballengee,
Cl1arleston.
DISCHAHGES - Clarence
Wi ckline, Clyde Brookov er.
Joseph Rudolph, Hilda War th
and Lena Markins.

"The pale pastels whi ch have warm, vibrant brick-red.
been fea tured in most food
·'Tile same imaginative
stores during the past 20 years efforts have been applied to
are no longer in tune with t.he every section of the store," Mr.
mood of the 1970s," he said. Beaty explained . Vari ous
This store wilt be gi ven a new see tions of the store will be
cheerful look, which he departmenl&lt;tlized through the
described as "earth-keyed," use of distinctive colors, which
witl1 tones ran ging from a will cany through even to the
sofll y·rich golden shade to a fl ooring, he noted .
New specialty departments
will be featured, such as,
OEMS TO MEET
Mexican , Chinese,. Japanese,
Norman Will, chairman of Kosher and Dietetic Foods.
the Democrat Central Com- Also included in the specialty
mittee, . announ ced today a departments is a Health Food
meeting of the committee only Section, which is the first such
will be held Thursday at 8 p.m. departments for Kroger in this
at the Episcopal Parish House area.
in Pomer oy. End orse men t!:!
After completion , the Silver
and general business will be Bridge Super Store will be the
cunducted in preparation for area 's largest and most
the fall campaign.
modern supermarket.
The Kroger Charleston
Division currently operates 49
supe rm arkets
in
West
Virginia, Kentucky and Ohio
Mrs. Judy Lloyd and boys, from headquarters and
David and Cilris, of Tampa, distribution center located at
Fla ., spenl a vacation here 6313 McCorkle Avenue in
with her parents, Mr . and Mrs. Charleston, West Virginia .
Bruce Morris and fami ly. Mr.

Langsville

Lloyd,in to
whoColumbus
is in the Air
new
andForce,
came
to Langsv ille to spend a few
days with his family . Mr. and
Mrs. Morri s took Mrs . Lloyd
and boys back to their horne at

the

THE HOSPITAL
!Technicolor)
Georg e Scott

'
FOR BIG DISCOUNT SAVINGS!

700 W. Main · Pomeroy
9 to 9 Daily-Sunday t -9

I

I

Dia nna Rigg

IG PI

Cartoons :

No Space Like Home
Wind Bag
The Duster
Show Starts 7 P.M.
Wednesday &amp; Thursday
August 23·24
NOT OPEN

t

•

•

{jv

Neh;on of Mari on and Theron

Devoted To The lnter~ts Of The Me~s-Ma8on Area

POMEROY-MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

... ' "'' 1,\

1'hey cursed and jeered at Nixon stressed youth's new and
delegates and dignitaries untested political muscle when
Tuesday night, pounding on he arrived here Tuesday and
arriving cars, ripping down again at a Miami stadium rock
posters and breaking a few concert where he delivered
windows.
what amounted to an WJOfficial
Nixon, In a speech he drafted acceptance speech in the
on 12 pads of yellow legal..slzed embrace of black entertainer
pages, will make his carefully Sanuny Davis Jr.
considered appeal to blacks
"We've got just as good a
and minorities after the ron- shot at it (the youth vote) as
ventlon ratifies hiii selection of the other side," he llllid.
Vice President Spiro T. Agnew
At the convention hall,
for another term.
delegates watched Nixon's appearance before the young on
Allends Roek Concert
huge televiiiion screens.
To chants of "Four more
Minutes before, balloons had
years, four more years!" showered upon them as the
results of their balloting were
announced - Nixon's re ..
nomination by a voU. of 1,347
to!.
The single vote of dissent
By United PreuiDtematlonal
COLUMBUS -BACKERS OF A MOVE TO repeal the state was reluctantly cast by New
income tax apparently will need at least another 12,000 valid Mexico for anti-Vietnam Rep.
signatures to qualify the proposal for the November ballot. Lee Paul N. McCloskey of
Woroter, assistant elections colUlsel In the secretary of state's California on the basts of his
office, said Tuesday of 72,635 signatures on petitions checked so showing in that state's primary
last spring.
far by local election boards, 10,463had been Invalidated.
The convention accepted a
Worster said if the 14.4 per ceni Invalid rate continued, the
Nlxonian platform defending
Citizens to Repeal the Slate Income Tax would fall short about
his
Vietnam
policies,
12,000 signatures of the necessary 318,414. The group, however,
denouncing marijuarui, racial
would bave 10 days to secure more signatures.
busing and gun controls and
amended only to speak more
MIAMI BEACH -FORMER GOVERNOR James A. Rhodes clearly on behalf of the seHsaid, here Tuesday he would make "no decisions on 1974 until 11174 determination rights of
gets here" when asked if he would run for governor or senator. American Indians.
Rhodes made the statement at a news conference he called to
Reforms Scorned
emphasize the importance of more vocational education In high
The delegates scorned reschools.
forms proposed by liberals
"Govern~~:, are you running for sovernor in 1974," a
which could have hampered
new1111an asked. "I'm lnteretlted In electing a president In 1972," Agnew In a bid next time for
replied Rhodes. "We'll talk about 1974 in 1974."
the presidential nomination.
Sen. Charles H. Percy of
Illinoiii,
a leader earlier in the
FREMONT, OHIO -ONE CHILD WAS INJURED seriously
and 15 others injured slishtly when a church bus overturned week of the fight to alter the
delegate selection formula for
Tuesday night on stale route 19, north of here.
1976,
sat silent while others
The bus, owned by the Fremont Baptist Temple, overturned
when the driver, Doyle PhiWps of GipsonbW'g, lost control on a carried the battle to the consoft shoulder In a construction area, the Slate Highway Patrol vention floor at Tuesday afsaid . Phllllpa was taking 34 children home from vacation bible ternoon's session. Conservatives had claimed that Percy's
achool at the church.
efforts were seH..erving.
The refonners wanted to
CAIRO -A SOUTH YEMJNI AIIUJNER hijacked Tuesday
change the system which
over the Mediterranean Sea and flown to Ubya, landed at Cairo awards extra delegates to
today, the Middle East News Agency said.
stalwartly Republican states,
The three hijackers - two men and a woman - remained uually rural, small and
behind In Benghazi as did thrae other passengers among the 61 con!lerVatlve, at the expense of
persons aboard the AI Yemda DC6 airliner, the agency said. It ltg states where moderate and
quoted !lie passengers who arrived in Cairo as saying: "The liberal Republicans come
three hijackers surrendered with their weapons to Ubyan from. But they were defeated
authorities when the plane landed In Benghaz" Tuesday night. by a vote of 910 to 434.
New York Gov. Nelaon A.
Rockefeller, often a Nixon foe .
Mrs. Haggerty Hosts Democrats
in the past and three Urnes a
candidate !or the party's
The Meigs CoWJty Women's date set for October 7. Tickets pre1identlal nomination,
Democrat club met Monday will be sold for the event.
placed Nixon in nominationevening at the home of Mrs.
wu followed by II
and
A delicious dessert was
Robert Haggerty in Mid· served by Mrs, Haggerty. The seconding speeches, Including
dleport. Plans were made for a next meeting will be Sept. 15 at three Democrats, a teen-eged
flUld raising dinner and a 7:30 p.m. in the home of Mrs. black girl from Nevada and a
"meet the candidates" night to Lee Enoch of Syracuse. All fired Nixon administration
be in the masonic building in ladles who would be Interested Ca!Met officer, !ormer InMiddleport with the tentative in joining are invited.
terior Secretary Walter Hickel.

v'

Tonight. Aug. 22
" DIAMONDS ARE
FOREVER"

IGPI

THE ORGANIZATION
I Color)
Si dn ey Poi tier
Barbara McNa ir

---

IGPI

Wed.·Thur.-Fri.
Augusi2J.24-2S

Superbly Upholstered
and oualitv-built by FLEXSTEE~

Jill St. John
(Co lor)

·

Double Feature Program

"GROUP MARRIAGE"
Plus
THE MARRIAGE
OF A
YOUNGSfOCKBROKER
I Color)
Richard Benjamin
Joanna Shimkus
( R)

Enhance your living with beautiful Traditional! This 87' sofa
is designed for sumptuous comfort wilh a plu111p loose pillow·
bock and reversible T·cushion seatl Companion lounge choirs
feature biscuit tufted backs and channel tufted, reversible seat
cushions. Each boosts famous Flexsteel ~ construction with
patented Flexsteel ~ blue steel spring, finest cushioning ma•
teriols, a solid hardwood frame and quality decorator fabrics ...
most protected against soil and stains.

.l(,
..

OHIIIIItll..,..
..... 11'1.,1111

.__..__ _...__MIDDLEPORT, OHIO-~---~
I

I

TEN CENTS

l'''i{==:~d;:::::;:1\\1 54

• FairFirst:;:;•
~

.

M

has two one-Inch reels of hose 150 feet long.
Above from left to right, are Rutland volunteer firemen Archie McKinney,
Jim Quillen, Jim Thomas, Dick Foley, Raymond Wilcox, and Eugene
Thompson, The department will sponsor a carnival September 6, 7, 8, and 9
at the Rutland football field. Proceeds will go to buy more hose for the truck.
The Stimson Amusement Co. of Pataskala will provide rides. Tickets may be
purchased from any fireman.

Pints of Blood are Taken

(:la

Fifty-four pints of blood were LPN, Mary Arms, LPN ,
;:;: received fr om 66 prospective Frances Brewington, RN, and
donors who turned out at the Barbara Van Meter, RN .
Tony Kennedy, son of Mr. Bloodmobile in Pomeroy Doctors serving were John
and Mrs. Junior Kennedy, and Elementary School Monday. Ridgway, D.O.; Raymond
· M. D.; L. D. Te11e, M.
a member of the Meigs County Thirty-two pints of the 54 were Bmce,
Saddle Sitters 4-H Club, wi II be given in replacement. .There . o., an d Aar om Boonsue, M..
D
the first Meigs County were nine first time donors .
The canteen was served by
representative to participate in
Gallon donors were Larry the American Legion Post No.
the 1972 Ohio StaU. Fair .
May and Donna Davidson; two 39, Pomeroy , Mrs . Grace
Even though the State Fair ga ll on donors were Leafy Prat t, President. Loading and
does not open officially until Chasteen
and
Dorothy un loading was done by Boy
Thursday. Tony and his Badgley, a three gallon donor Scout Troop No. 249, Tom
parents left on Tuesday for was Joseph Gloeckner, four Cassell, Scoutmaster.
Columbus so that Tony would ga llon donors were Grant
Clerical work was performed
be ready for his first ap- Smith and Harlan Wehrung, by Mary Nease, Jean Nease,
pearance in the Ohio State and Robert Vaughan was a Joyce Hoback, Grace Drake,
Junior Fair Horse Show , five -ga llon donor . Richard Jean Sayre, Juanita Sayre,
starting 9:30a.m. Wednesday Barton donated his 12th gallon. Eloise White, Dorothy Smith,
and concluding Thursday .
Nurses were Naomi London, Elva
Dailey,
Jeanette
Tony will compete in the
showmanship class for
WesU.rn ponies (48" and under) members 9 years or third
grade through 18 inclusive, and
also in the Western Horsemanship Ponies ( 48;; and
The Eastern Local School aides in the elementary
lUlder).
board
Tuesday discussed how schools. Application to these
Meigs County has been en·
titled to only one represen- to fill the position of high school 'jobs will he received until Sept.
l&lt;ttives in the Ohio 4-H Horse principal, vacated since the 4. Applicants must have
Show because enrollment was resignation of Bobby Ord.
proficiency in office skills
An application for the including competency in typing
under 5(1, Hopefully in 1973
Meigs County may be entitled position has been received by and math. The work pays $1.60
the board, but before the
to two entries.
Selection of Tony to person can be hired he must be
represent Meigs County was released from his present
made by AI Weygandt the school district, Supt. John
judge at the Meigs County 4-H Riebel said.
In other busines the hoard
Horse Show held at the Meigs
adopted
a school lunch policy.
A concert will be presented
ColUlty Fair last Saturday.
Lunches in the elementary this evening at the Pomeroy
schools will cost 25 cents per Junior High School from 8p. m.
dsy,high schoolllUlches will be till midnight sponsored by the
$1.25 for a weekly lunch ticket, Coffee House Committee.
and 30 cents if paid by the day.
To be featured are "Allan·
For the first time the board tis", "Lost John and Zeke",
created positions for office "Eric Chambers" and "Hoff-

MRS. J. M. 'l'HORN'IQN, 1111, toall kip IJonon at tbe "-'lean Lelion Aullllary Convutlon held at Clnclrfllltlln JUly, Mrll. Thorntctn, !or her legillatlon report, won lint place In
!be Eilblh llillrlctand third In !he State. Pr.a!iinc Mrs. Thol'lllon with her dtetlon and gift of'
IIIGIIe)' Ia Mrs. Vediillivil wbo IICcepted the nudut'tbe convention in tbe abeence of Mrs•.
'l'IKnltm. Mrl. 1bornton II put )lnlldtllt ol Dmr Welljbt Abllllii'$' Unit 88 and leglalatlve,
dlllrmu. Mrl. Dl'fll II hunoedlllte pUt )lnlldenl.
'

AI

Lawrence, Martha Lou Beegle,
Clara Mcintyre, Beulah
Strauss, Becky Anderson,
Donna Nelson, Edith Sisson,
Vernon Nease, Mickey Wolfe,
Pauline Collins.
Donations were by Quality
Print Shop, Meigs Local
Schools, Daily Sentinel, Athens
Messenger, WMPO Radio
Station, Ewing FlUleral Home,
VeU.rans Memorial Hospital,
Krogers, A&amp;P, Simon 's
Market, Elberfelds, Dorothy
Douglas and Valley Belly
Dairy.

:;:;
..

Hick s,

James

Gilmore,

William Radford, Mrs. Evelyn
Clark, Harlan H. Wehrong,
Kenneth Scttes, Larry E. May,
Dwight Goins, Howard Logan,
Patty Barton, Robert Couch,
Robert L. Shook, Demaree
Sexson, Gary Smith, Martin

McAngus, Norb.ert Neutzllng,
Sr.. Cliflord Young, Larry
Parsons.

.

Racine - Martha Dudding,

Emma

Adams.

Lawrence,

John

Jeanette
Stobart,

Dorothv Badg ley, Ralph
Badgley, Floyd E. Hendricks,

Michael Brown, Ronald Salser.

Howard Ervin, Dorothy Glenn.

Middleport -

Robert King,

Mr . Edward Durst, Mrs.·
Norma G. Wilcox, Mrs. Sarah

J. Fowler, C. Robert Fisher,
Mr . Selwyn Smith. Paul
Haptonstalt , Louis Lon~. Mr .
(Continued on page 10)

Donors were:
Pomeroy - Barbara J .
White, Robert W. Vaughan.
Joseph Gloeckner. George H.

Eastern Still Needs Administrator
per hour.
The board agreed to have
county engineer Theodore
Beegle check a slip on the
Silver Ridge road to ascertain
if it is safe for a school bus to
travel.

Benefit Concert Coming.

Majorettes

Will Wear

ner and St.one" and others.
Also to be presented Is an
"incredible fire act" by Jamie.
Admission is $1.50 per person.
Proceeds will be used toward
the opening of a "Coffee
House" (youth center) in
Pomeroy.

New Outfits

WREN GOES PRO
Bob Wren, who piloted Ohio
Un!versity Bobcat baseball
squads through 24 consecutive
winning ieasons, lias accepted
a poet with the Philadelphia
Phillies as special assignment
instructor and scout. Wren
resigned from hls Ohio
University P011t July I.

A meeting of all kindergarten students and parents
will be held Thursday at
Chester Elementary from I to 3
p.m.
A teachers meeting will be
held Friday at 10:30 a.m.
Students will report for
achool on Monday for full day
of classes. Bus rlUls are the
same as last year, Riebel
reported.

Six Fined

By Court
Six defendants were fined ,
Uu:ee others forfeited boMs
and one was assessed cosLs
only in Middleport Mayor John
Zerkle's court Tuesday night.
Fined were Roy Newell, 42,
Middlepor t, $25 and costs,
assault and battery; James
Wisecup, Pomeroy, $15 and

costs,

.\
"

•

intoxication; Larry L.

Fox, 33, Middleport, $100 and
costs, three days confinement,
driving while intoxicated;
Marie Smith, 54, Middleport,
$25 and cosLs, disturbing the
peace; Vickie K. Deem, 22,
Pomeroy, costs only, rlUlning a
red light; Fred Older , 23,
Racine, and Woodrow Hall , 19,
Racine, $15 and costs each,
lnt.oxication.
Forlei ling bonds were Jenny
Whittington, no address
recorded, $.10 bond, disturbing
the peace; James Hall, 25,
Middleport,
$25
bond,
disturbing the peace, &lt;he Virgil
L. Hill, 30, Racine, $25 bond,
blocking an alley.

-~

'

'

BAKER FURNITURE

PHONE 992·2156

NEW FIRE TRUCK - Rutland has purchased and paid for a new 1972
International Fire Truck costing $20,400. The truck, converted by the
Stephens Co. of Columbus into a lire truck, will go on all rural Rutland
township and village fires. The $20,400 was raised by donations, the fire levy,
ladies auxiliary, and the vollUlteer firemen.
The truck holds GOO gallons of water, will pump 750 gallon per minute, and

The Meigs Band Boosters
approved the purchase of new
uniforms for the band's
majorettes Monday night with
Mrs. Kenneth McLaughlin,
· president, presiding.
Dwight Goins, band director,
explained that a sequin
Wliform for the majorettes,
since they will do fire baton
routines, would definitely add
to their safety .
The Boosters, In other
business, voted to treat band
meinbers at aU home games.
The minutes were read by Mrs.
Jim O'Brien and Mrs. AHred
Rusche! gave a report on the
two tag days conducted by
band members.
The Boosters will meet at the
football field in Pomeroy on
Sept. 5 at 7 p.m. to clean the
two dressing rooms. On Thursday, Sept. 7, at 6:30p.m. the
band will take part in meet the
learn and meet the band night.

1\ c.ulr!l\11 NHrhrlv

Double Feature Program

WEDNESDAY, AUGUST 23, 1972

MIAMI BEACH · (UPI)President Nixon pllUlges Into
his fifth campaign for national
office tonight in pursuit of a
life's dream-a landslide.
The candidate for re-election
of a conservative platform and
convention, he III pitching his
appeal to the two big blocs of
voters where polls give Democratic rival George S. McGovern the edge-the blacks
and the yolUlg.
Youth violently against
Nixon vowed to lay siege to
Convention Hall to keep It baH
empty when he appears
tonight .

MASON DRIVE-IN ·

Plus

Tonight, Aug. 22

p•••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••..

Morr is and Emma Ledlie.
Mr. and Mrs. Gorden Carter
of Poto,key, Mi ch., spent a
weekend with Iter sis ter, Mrs.
Emma Ledlie. On Sunday they
all attended a reun ion at Point
Pleasa nt.
Mrs. Sharon Barr and
r hildren called on her parents,
Mr. and Mrs. Howar d Thoma
Monday night.
Mrs. Dena Hoffman spent a
few da ys with her daughter-inlaw, Mrs. Patty Hoffman , and
boys at Albany.
Mr. and Mrs. Carl Gorby
called on Alpha Barr Tuesday
evening.

Sean Conn ery

MEIGS THEATRE

ELBERFELDS IN POMEROY

Tampa and spe nl a week in
Florida .

Mr . and Mrs. Duane Barr
and son, Shawn, Oak Hill, and
Kev in Derkin of Columbus
spent Mnnday at the home of
Duane's parents, Mr. and Mrs .
Alpha Barr. Other .callers at
the Barr horne was Eugene
Musser, Mr . and Mrs. Clair

en tine

ew";.J"n n;i~/~

Stop in right away, look
around, find what you
like and stock up on
vour Lee Work Clothes at Elberfelds.

Cloudy, mild through
Thursday, chance of thundershowers continuing
t.onight and Thursday. Highs
Thursday will be in the 80s
again .

Nixon Aiming
For Landslide
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November zn

Mildred Roush
Died
on Monday Band Opens Camp At Southside
Funeral services for Mildred
Eloise Roush, 43, Wright St.,
MASON - Wahama Band
Pomeroy, who died at her members began their annual
residence Monday morning, band camp at Southside 4-H
will be held Wednesday at 1 Ca mp in Mason County Sunp.m. at Ewing Chapel with the day. The marching band will
Rev . Robert Kuhn officiating. spend 10 days there to prepare
Mrs. Roush is survived by for the year's activ ities.
her husband, Earl, and these
Gerald Simmons and Charles
children Mrs. Barbara Burke Yeag o, co-directors, are in
Valley Forge, Pa .; Cheste; charge of the camp. Parents
Louis Roush, Washington, o. · ass isting are Mrs . Oak
C.; Patricia' Ann Roush ,
Pomeroy ; her parents, Lewis
J. and Emma E. Dailey Fox,
Pomeroy; two sisters, lola
Howell , Pomeroy , and Ruth
Douglas , Dyesvillc: one
grandson , Robert Christopher
Burke, and several nieces and

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Henry G. Davis of West
•Virginia was 80 years old when
he ran for the vice presidency
on the Democratic ticket in
1904.

Today's game was sch~uled tenniii room where the third
for I p.m. EDT with Russian game was held. At the time
world champion Boris Spassky Schmid said there was no real
playing white and moving fir$. · di.stll!'hance even lho1J8h condiFischer has a 9~ to 6~ point tions were not perfect.
lead in· the $250,000 match.
When Informed of FIBcher's
Fischer needs only three more letter, sCtunid, a 44-year~Id
points to win the world chess grandmuter and publlaher,
title. Spassky needs 5~ points said, "I shall read Fischer's
to retain the title.
letter very carefully and make
Schmid has refused all of up my mind. I'm not for
Fischer's protests-there were Fischer, noi for Spasaky. I am
three demands to move SlUl· neutral and trying very hard to
day's 16th game into the table divide SWI and wind correctly."
R~'slan
sources said
Spasiky would not accept a
change of location to small
How~rd, Jr., Mrs. Fl.o~ene room where he lost the third
Fmmcum, cooks; Mrs. Wtlham game. after Fischer forfeited
Russell, camp manager, and the second In protest of
Mrs. Jack Needs, Mrs. television cameras In the main
Maryanne Gorrell and Mr. and han. ·
Mrs. James Hart, chaperones.
The Russian had the fourth
SlUlday, Aug. 27, the band game moved back Into the
wtll present a concert at 1:30 main hall because he said he
p.m. All parents and friends could hear automobiles and
are invited. Camp will close on children playing In the other
Wednesday at 5 p.m.
room.

Weather

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RI!'.IIERVE CIL\MPI(lll ol the Melp Coant,y 4-H bane lbolr SlturdiJ It tblllelfl County
Fair '11'1111 Mary Weyeramtiter, da1J8hter of Mr. and Mra. James E. Weyel'lllliller Iii Pomeroy ..
In addition to reeerve champion honors Mary won· 1st place ln western plealllll't bone IIIIi,
other awards. She received aU A's In h?E;jects with her registered quatier bone "Budtqe
Wimpy." Mary has been a ~H mem
year. She III a member of Mellis County Saddle
Sitters, and her advisors are Bill Cole and . R. KeMedy. Judging SaturdaY's show was AI
·
'Weygandt of WOOiter.

Velenns Memorial Hospital
ADMISSIONS - Donna
Jones, Pomeroy; Alice
Coleman, Albany; Michael
Martin, Pomeroy, and Jennie
Newmyer, Wilkesville.
DISCHARGES - Bernice
Lavalley, Michael Dawson,
Janice
Young,
Mark
Ballimgee, Edith McKenzie,
Aries Simpson, Allee RuaseU
and Eleanor Faulll.

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�3-The lllllly Sentinel, Mlddleport-l'&lt;lmeroy, o., August 23, 11172

2- The Dally Sent mel, Mlddleport-Pomero) 0 August Z:l t'l/2

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EDITORIALS

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Education Expenses

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Ji)JShorted Vi~~. .Y..~.~ Gets Break
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11 1111 lu 11 h ~trld llrt
t tint !I t 11 11 "'sit 111

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llw lnu - tn st Ll\ In mg n;kul to t 11-!h l In 11 11 tm popu ln
\\U I diU\ l h &lt;.U b\ b t l!l ,._ d \\ ild~1 d L d liLd[l l! l.ll[ IJ~ tt dl!s [,II
brlu\\ !host ol Wm lrt W lt II 111 Kott .l
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Cliche's Last Stand, 1 Maybe

\\ htlt' t lw Vtet ndm Gl B tll ts dt.•:;: tg nul to lulp \t llt 1n s
rehun to sc hool tilt bt11W i tl s 11 p~ns - $ 1 7:) d nw nl h lot

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sm,;le \el l' r dll -a Jt hd t cl h ltlU tg h thl st d.l\ s
Onh 9 4 pt~l ce nt ot !Jiat k Va:hhl m \ dt I Lin ... ~\tlh ht ~l 1
~c h oolt~dura tt n n s go on to l oll t~L utd onl\ li plt un r
of wht le ex Gls J u!7it -11 jl(l tl ll l ol thost owlw 11dCI so nu
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be !{}] (l e&gt; n te J Ill!! St..: I\ I (;(' llo\li I III I! ll to st hth&gt;l
In an att empt to cha ll_.!l tlu.:sC' st(j ll slt u; .1 tu; t prn j.!J Htl
- lh£l \ (}l eJa ns Ed m t~ I!Oil &lt;JI1d rr a lll!t l,C Stt\ U l rV I /S r
has bf'en unrlt.llf ake n 111 HI u lr t.~ b\ IIH 1\c.~tto n .J I I t.J g u~
of Cl i tes a nd l ht l l s Con lt ' ' nt.l ol M ' ' 01 s unfit 1 l $)
rmllJOil g1ant IJ om t he Otlrn t I I conunm Oppi )J!unJh
l1s1ng gmet ll lll tlll JObs dulhm tztd ruult t !ht. l•m t.t
ge ne \ Emp!cn m l'nt \l:l ~rml th ost th tt l r111 bt. sttlll l'd
/Ja m

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p !OJ,!I a lll ._lfflll ,..,I S t nr
~ha l t ont. 10 hu lll JUIJ I• H. h ~ ot ~ to
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n rru o r coll tgl
tu. lmt.l l o1

llld tt "il l \

two \ e-f~ 1 a ns to

school full tum

voc atwn a! sc hoolr .rnd

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h \\ or ks 20 110111 s a \-\ t 1 k on 1ht

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On the 8VI2 13 ~-ot' a HI U&lt;J JI I ~ a l&gt;l t l u rHIII :ii2 jf)(j JIIIIU ..I/h
to th ~ $2 100 a\ atlabh. t u hrm uudu tht (,J Bi ll ht.'"' lllr r
\1:'31 ago 111 Cha. •1go Clt. \tland Dli!Oll tndl dlldpoh
Los Anglles St attk Nr v..c.J Jk Mm n11 Dt n .u lJUI /' 11,
tdenee VE 1 S IS Hd lh pr s t 11 0\\ llll ttg ln '"' trnm rh
or ga mzat10nal pt; r lOd
In add 1t10n to f und tn g t he pr og r am um ul till l11 g~~ sl
probl em s has Uee nlhe rt lu eta n~.: e ur 1drrsal n ln ~tltl\ 1x
Gl s to go bac k to sd w ol pa r f ~e: ul a r 1\ In\\ tllt.:O ilH IJ I.H. J.. :-;
Mexrca n Am rr rca ns &lt;:! ncl Puerl o HI(: rn s \\ ho ~ 1111 ''" ' t
fl esh m e m o l lf!~ ol ~t:lwo l s 111 .,11 d rrl nol lll l {l thu r m td"
Thtr ~ tlrt ob ]P{fl\ l S ot \1 I S r ~ not Jll h t u hl lp r n-.t
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tlun kmg orr \ CJI!I p~ut
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ptlhaps
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"If II \1 U r/ d h~ t \ l ht ~ t1 tp Ill 11 II :-;

BRUCE BIOSSAT

Needs to Mend Fences

Agnew

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'7 6 Is the Big Talk
Jh BHll I BlOSS I I

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I&lt; II
l)l(td~l rn 1976 But tht:\ s.J\ llt 1111 s l lll tk t c.:r ttlt ll IH rrl
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l llt-.t plojllt thrl\ t its l!Hit l\ 11 tllrld IJt lu~th c1
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~p u.: ul.rt ru n
tJVt:t 1976 IS e.:ollt 11H.I tt \ nd Spl!o \'"'Ill\\ :-; lld ii H: 111{\lldhh
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lops tlw lrst
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Voice along Br'Way
BY JACK 0 BRIAN
S1RIPPER PROMISES
SOTHERN EXPOSURE
NEWYORK (KFS) - Most dynamic of &lt;i ll
oldtunc str1ppers Georgw Sotliern 11 11l bare all
m her autob wg A theatnc"l muons fun d fu1
mdagenl members was used to bury one
member kn own w1delv as havmg 1aul ts and
vaul ts of scalper s 1ce slas hed away
sumewhe1e Hed) La ma rr dl 57 has mOJ e- than
enuugh left to keep realtor Robell Alton m
ecs ta sy
Black H wood actJ css dec rded tu
ha ve !lie baby but won ! tell Papa s na me )et
Ca1 ncg1c Hall will crack down on potheads
al future 1ock fests 1 hey vandaliZe too much
property No danger 1n man )uana eh?
Budd) Hackett threatens to hop on the wagon
Lots of fn endly encouragement
Susan
Hayward w11l be a grandma agam (2nd ) m Nov
ABC-TV's spmmng off 1ls film subs1d1a ry
CBS next '
Tlunk Sen Torn Eagleton 1sn 1 a hero' He
s1gned a menu at La Scala here and ow ner
Roberto V10la had 1t fr amed and hung w1 llun
hours Chicago Maym Daley s buymg a home
'" Ireland HIS pop came from there
ronv
Newlcy and stewardess Dareth R1ch ha1e
everytlun • but mamage '" their plans they tell
pals Jo 1n Ma rie) i\h MacGraw s fathc1 m
' Love Sto1 and the H wood pi oducer "hu had
h1s h01 se b 1eaded rn I he Godfather, ended
h1s O\\n love ocy h1s Wife of 22 years IS
d1vorcmg htm
Joe D1Maggw keeps h1s slar~ ra figure
Simply enough at Gallag her s, a !anned, flt Joe
downed rare chopped steak, salad and black
coffee . asade fr om the snm\ on the roof , Joe's
the same as 25 years ago Songstress Helen
O'Connell s daughter Jackre has a new husband
sculptor Rafe /\fleck, her second lime around
Shirley MacLame of poht•cs and flim s m a
Women 's Wear mterv1ew ca lled her husband of
18 years "my best friend Meanwlulc another
best fmnd , wrtter Pete Ham1ll was Identified
as the typmg nmse m another room
Couple of showbiZ promoters dec1ded not to
offer chessty Bobby Fischer an&gt; b1g lout He's

dltlltH/(

mak1ng lumself too unpopul.u and folks wun t
pay JUSI to boo II 1m one !old us N Y Cung
Herman Badill o told Bill Chan of the Gold Co m
I m gomg to be the nex t mayor of New York
Yuung Wmslon mav ball out MGMfrom all
tlre unnerv mg 1 umors
T1ckctrun, !he computenzed theatncal !Jekel
p1 •]ecl \\ as a bleto ld enllfy~scalpe l - and ge t
hm r con11cted
fhe fmal cleanu p of !eg1t
I!Jcaler bu&lt;offl ces 1sn I lou far away It's still
l drnpant but \\ll lwul enough hats dun ng the
summc1dold1 um (no Bdll ) show IS scllr ng out
i\11 Carnev s Pr 1sone1 of 2nd i\ ve IS huldmg
up as the b•ggest pla y lnt)
The boxofflce
problcm has been a1ound for decades back
when b11&lt;off1ce II easurers were gelling !90 a
11 cck 11ne upenl) flaun ted a huge hume at Sands
Puml brg as He1 ber t Bayard Swope's
The new Uus Theater (on the Slle of the b1g
uld Ca p1 tul 1heater ) Wlll be Bdwy s b1ggest
leg1 1house - I 900 seals II opens th1s fall w1th
a rock mus1cal Galactra produced by the
late Rube Goldberg s son George W Gemge
and Barnard Strauss
Art Ca rney and Bm
bara Barn e w1ll lea-e the Bdwy '2nd Ave
cas t m Sept to p1ck up all the b1g bread on th e
Cuasland m Clncago No Bdwy replacements
se I yet Freda Payne ba1 ed all for two nekkld
mags Pla1 boy and Pen thouse
fhe latter
ma kes lhe fo1 lllel seem d1gn1fled as Nat I
Geugra plnc
TVs changmg folks Bill Bixby s new
Panunoun t contract prOJects a senes about a
man ull h t" o w1ves
One uf the grea t Jazzmen of all t1me was
Gate Frega \\ho pla)ed bass fiddle w1 th Les
Brown Paul Wlnteman and last and most, w1lh
J ue Muoney s celebrated avant group, Gate qu1t
Joe and Jazz Ill 1948 to become a Capuchm
monk He s nowFather JohrtFrega 0 F M Cap
For the pas t year he's been at St Elizabeth
Hospital 1n Washmgton workmg w1th add1cts,
alcuhrrhcs ana the relar ded and JUSI was named
chaplam of the Huntsville State PriSon m Texas
He was ordamed at Beacon N Y , and has
scads of relahves m New Jersey

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Helen

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Marauders Building New Machine for 1972 Race

.. .: &lt;o"~.J&gt; :::!-» ~ ~,

~

~elp ;"'

By Helen Hottel

••

J",

WED IN A DAZE HE WANTS OUT
Dear Helen
A r P mamed us on a wild weekend tnp to Las Vegas It
seemed a good 1dea at the time but I adnut I was partly smashed
We 've been fightmg togeU1er e1ght mooths and I want out,
but she doesn 't I've remembered a couple of techmcaht1es that
m1ght get me an annulment What do you think'
F1rst when the J P read off the usual Jumbo my mmd
wandered, and when he asked ' Do you take th1s woman etc '"
I JUSt nodded my head, so he sa1d, "I do," promptmg me, and I
sa1d Yeah Later we kidded each other about wh1ch man my
w1fe' mamed - me or the guy who sa1d 'I do" (That was
before regret set m1)
Second, I d1scover m looking over the hcense that my name
ISn't spelled r~ght They've got 1t RJ&gt;bert Srmth Instead of Rupert
Snuthe, and Robert Sm1th could he ten thousand other men (The
J P had been tipplmg too ) I s1gned several thmgs that rught, but
my stgnature IS a scrawl when I'm drunk
An annulment ur eas1er and cheaper than a divorce Is 11
posSible' - RUPERT SMITHE (Not my real name but you get
the 1dea)
Dear Rupert
Probably not but only a lawyer can tell you for sure Maybe
he m1ght make 'unsoWld mmd' a case for annulment - H

+++

Dear Helen
My husband 's brothers are b1g burly men who thmk throwmg
the1r bab1es h1gh m the a1r and catchmg them, or balancmg a
rune-month-&lt;Jid by one foot (also h1gh above !hell' heads ) 1s fine
JUSt because she laughs
Their w1ves thmk 11e are "overprotective" because I keep
po1sons m unreachable places and medicmes locked up I don t
leave razor blades kmves or sc1ssors around, and thmk 1t's
better to put candy away than constantly say "No-no '
The1r standard remark IS "They have to learn some t1me,"
and they llllply that we ll e1ther brmg up a s1ssy or a child who
rebels and leaves home early
I ve got to the pomt where I'm gomg to say somethmg nasty
1f they don t stop harpmg How can !shut them up' -YOUNG
MOTHER
Dear Mother
Why don t you throw the book at them ' Dr Spock s book, I
mean - H
Dear Helen
About the woman who was less than thrilled when her
husband brought home llckets to a hve baseball game (saymg
she had enough TV sports Without THAT I
I'm disgusted w1th females who expect support and love
from their husbands but who can t g1ven them a weekend to
enJOY sports Why don t these self1sh dames become mterested m
thc1r mens hobbles s1t down and enJOY the games too' Why
wast e tlllle sulkin g because they get less aUenllon than the TV
screen?
A woman who star :S up the vacuum orotherw1se consp1res to
rwn her husband s relaxallon deserves a man who gets his
relaxation' away from home'
M) mama ge •sn't perfect but 1t's happy because I've
learned to g1ve as well as receiVe, and we both go on the theory
that when 'love IS bhnd ' to mmor faults ll sees the major
blessmgs tw1ce as clearly - A S
Dear A
Happy football season to you , too
(As one of those people who can't get enthralled With spec
Ialor sports, I take my m epress1ble force out on the typewnter
when my husband becomes an Immovable object m front of the
Saturday TV screen ) - H

WIN AT BRIDGE

Lead Directing Beats Game

-

By Paul Crabtree

Last tune, we were talkmg about the relative mer1ts of
baseball and football, and 1was argu1ng the cause for ba!eball as
the better sport to watch (although I am totally addicted to
football, too)
There are many reasons - enumerated yesterday - why I
prefer baseball, but the most unportsnt one I saved for
discUSSIOn today
In maJor league baseball, the difference between wmmng a
permant or World Series and being a scorned, cellar~wellmg
bunch of bums urexactly one game out of f1ve
The heroes, the toasts of the town, the champs, will win about
three out of every flVJl games
The losers, the last-placers, the untouchables, still Wlll wm
about two games out of f1ve
Therefore, a team that can play 6110 baseball 1s almost
certam to wm a pennant, and a team pla)'lng 400 ball1s gomg to
be the worst of the als&lt;H'ans
(Look at the standings Any f~rst-place team playmg at 600
many of the four divur1ons would sllll be in lll'st place - as thls ur
written -and any team at 4110 would still be in the cellar There
are exceptions, w1th the new expanSloo clubs often playmg well
below 400 thel!' fll'st seasons, or a streak hke the Cleveland In·
dians' lll-13 bmge m 1954, but the rule holds true )
Football and basketball just cannot make the same claun
The AFLmakes1tan article of faith that any given team can
beat any other gtven team on any given Sunday - but the
champs are gomg to lose not more than a couple or three games
man average season, and the tall-enders will not wm more than
two or three
College football 1s dommated by the Wldefeated dynast1es
each season Basketball, up to the pro level, boasts several teams
who have lost no games (or only one or two ) until the armual
tournaments start reducmg the ranks
But in baseball, the difference between a bum and a gemus IS
the manager or owner who can field a team that can wm one
extra game out of a set of f1ve
That's what led the laughable New York Mets from a
collectiOn of ~!owns , retreads and never-quits in the mld.Sl.lties
to the Amazm' Mets, champions of all they surveyed m 1969
It s what caused last year's proud San FranciSco G1ants to
fall from dms10nal champs tostrugglers trymg to hang out of the
cellar this year Also w1tness the riSe of the White Sox and the
decline and fall of the Angels
What makes the difference be tween 600 and 400 teams •
That's ooe of the myster~es - and fascmat10ns - of baseball
Sometimes 1t's the sunple acqull'mg of good personnel at key
spots (the maturmg of the Mets' Tom Seaver and Jerry
Kossman), sometunes the change of a teams philosophy of play
(the Reds' sh1ft from slow-movmg power to speed and daring)
and sometimes an mtang~ble, such as Chuck Tanners turnabout
of the While Sox
It's a great game - even if 1t's not the only one

+++

ON THE TV DIAL Ftnal sessiOn of the GOP conventiOn

Television Log
Programs for Tonight

'

ltn, hydroren, mtrOP'An •ntf "'"n ...:..... .,n

gone from tackle The ends last
year, Larry Harmon and Jeff
Murris, are also gone
Other Marauders trymg for
startmg poslhons are semors
Jerry Coleman, Jon Dillard
(probable defens1ve starter ),
and Steve Jewell
The other Jumors are Robert
B~rchfleld, Ron Couch, Melvin
Cremeens (probable defensiVe
starter), Charles Diehl, Andy
Enghsh (posstble defensive
starter). Carl Rendncks, M1ke
Hoffman, Dana Johnson, Mike
McDaniel, Mark Moms,
Charles Neece, Mark Oller,
Terry Pickens, Robert Qualls,
Joe Rosenbaum, Paul Searls,
Harold S1sson, B1ll Slack
(possible defensive starter),
Jay Warner, and Dave Wolfe
The sophomores are R1ck
Bohn, Woody Call, Lonme
Coates, Greg France, Dan
!Iamson, M1ke Haley, Greg
McKmney, Jeff Musser, Jack
01ler, Bob Richards, John Pat
R1ley, Gerry White, and Terry
Whitlatch
Lettermen from last year are
Vaughan, Weber, Werry, Ash,
Chafm, Chaney, D1llard,
Eason, C Faulk R Faulk, L
McKmney, and McLaughlin
Coach Chancey's assistants
th1s year are Robert Me1er,
Fenton Taylor, DonD1xon, and
John Bentley
The Meigs schedule 1s as
follows, (last year's scores m
parentheses I
Sept. 8
Reemelin (0-H)
Sept 15
Belpre (12· 6)
Sept 22
at Logan (28- 8)
Sept 29
Wellston (38- 0)
Oct 6
at Ironton ( 6-221
Oct 13
Jackson (32-16)
Oct 20
at Waverly (14- I)
Oct 27
Athens ( 1).31)
Nov 3
Gaiiipolts (14-12)
Nov. 10 PI Pleasant( 8- 8)
Seven home games, three
away.

THIS IS HOW, hopefully, a winning footbaU
team is rebuilt at Meigs High. In the top picture,
Head Coacb Charles Chancey can be discerned
(sans any shin&gt; giving individual instruction to a
defensive lineman. Middle picture: Set, and
Hike. Below, the play bas started In Chancey's
"controlled" but hard hitting drill in which the
tmttal charge IS delivered full-go by offensive
and defens1ve units, but tacklmg IS under wraps

Here is where play is perfected.

Reds Ahead by 8112 Both American League Races Heat Up

WEDNESDAY, AUG 23
6 oo - News Wea ther Sports 3 4 8 10 15 Truth or Conseq ,
I Dream of Jea nnre 13 Halhayoga 33

6 30 - NB C News 3 4 15 ABC News 6 13 CBS News B 10
Brtdge 33
7 00 - News Weather Sports 6 10 W1ld W1ld Wes t 13

MONTREAl. (UP I)
An other game, another game
ahead, was the way Tuesday
mght went
The Cmcmnat1 Reds beat the
Montreal Expos S-3 here At
New York, the Mets beat the
Houston Astros 4-2
The combmat10n put the
Reds 8\2 games m front of
HQuston Ill the Nat10nal League
West
Pete Rose Immediately
JWllped on Montreal starter
Carl Morton, smghng to lead
off the first lnmng Wlth two
out, Johnny Bench homered,
hiS 28th, to g1ve Cmcmnat1 a 2-0
lead
More Home Runs
The Reds went ahead 3-0 on
Rose's fourth horne run of the
season m the s1xth mnlng And
before that Inning was over It
was 4.0, as Joe Morgan got on
base on an error
Morgan's pop fly to th1rd was
missed by Bob BBlley, Morgan
took second on Bobby Tolan's
smgle, went to thll'd when
Bench hit mto a double play
and scored on Tony Perez'
smgle
The run proved to be the
wmmng one as the Expos came
up with all three of their runs In
tbNeventh mnmg on two home
rWls Hal Breeden homered
w1th the bases empty and Ron
Woods duplicated hur effort
wtth Ken Singleton aboard
The home run barrage
chased 'tinclnnatl starter Ross
Grimsley He got credit for h1s
lith wln of the year m 17
declstons Pedro Borbon, who

M1 les tones of Progress 33 D ck Va n Dyke 4 What s My Line
8 Mayor s Report 15 Pelt tc:oat Junct ron 3

7

30 - Episode Act•on 33 To Tell The Truth 6 Repu bl ican
Con ventron 3 4 8 10 15

B 00 - The Super 6 13 To Be Ann ounced 33

B JO- CornerBar6 13 FJidOdysseyJ J
9 00 - Marty Feldman Comed y Ma ch rne 13

21

do you do now?

lb se niOr Roger Pearch, or 125
lb junwr Robbie Rams Ron
Smith was the wingback a year
ago
AI fullback, well, nobody
kn ows Alan McLaughlin, 145
lb jWilor, and Robbie Eason,
180 lb JUmor, were the top
candidates before summer
prac tice Coach Chancey has
been rW!mng a last year's
parthme
hneman
and
linebacker, Dallas Weber, 175
lb semor, at fullback But the
change from guard could be too
much m one year for the
powerful, talented Weber Tiny
W1Ihams ran fullback last
year And he really ran 1t
The quarterback JOb IS m
good hands those of 175 lb
senwt
Andy
Vaughan
Vaughan ran the team well last
year and has looked bnlhant 1n
dulls
On the hne, 1t looks like
e1ther RICk Gaul, 150 lb semor,
or J D Story, 155lb Junior, at
center, Eddie Young handled
the chores last year
At guards, Lou McKinney,
170 lb semor, seems a sure bet
fur one, and the other IS up for
grabs w1th John Lehew, 160 lb
JUillOr, T1m Kmg, 1451b semor,
or Weber lf he doesn't play m
the backfield, or one of several
others
The tackles w11l probably be
returmng starters Mark
Werry 245 lb semor, and
Randy Faulk
265 lb
sophomore
Ends look to he Bill Chaney,
170 lb semor , Tom Lowery, 150
lb JWHor, and Randy Chafin,
150 lb semor, who have the
ms1de track But there are
sev e ral underclassmen
pushmg these three at thiS
pOsitiOn
The startmg guards lost from
last year were Ted Lehew and
Roger D1xon wh1le Fred Lee IS

and Tomorrow

w1th only four clubs to th e 9 30 - Republi can Conv entron 4 13
- Soul 33
km g Jack Should South have II10 00
oo - News3 4 News B 10 13 15
elected to pass and North to II 30 - Johnny Carson 3 4 15 Dtck Ca vett 6 M ov tes The
redouble l'&gt;orth would have
Pathf rnder 10 Duff y of San Quen f ln 13 Mov1e - To Be
Announced 8
mad e at least two odd and
olo A Q \0
p1obably managed to collect I 00 - News a nd Weather -4
WF.ST
EASl
an
overtnck but South d1d I 30 - Local News 13
• K J92
• 86 5 4
The Oat~ Sentinel
b1d
two spades and was
• J 8 f) )
If 92
THURSDAY AUGUST 24
DEVOTED TO THE
promptly
put m three no
t4 2
• Q5l
6 00 - Sunrrse Semrnar 4 Sacred Heart 10
INTEREST OF
trump
by
North
" 74 {
oloK J85
MEIGS MASON AREA
6 15 - Farmt1me 10 Fa rm Report 13
CHESTER L TANNEHILL
Three no-trump d1d not 6 20 - Paul Harvey 13
SOUTH (I) )
E )( et Ed
fa1 e very well South !messed 6 30 - Columbus Today 4 B1ble Answers B America s
.A IU7 l
ROBERT HOEFLICH
Problems 10
If
A
K
10
dummy s 10 of clubs at tnck
Cttv Ed1tor
6
45Corncob Report 3 Davy &amp; Goliath 13
t AJ 'I
one Back came a spade with
Puo r slled dally eHep t
7
oo
Today
3 4 15, CBS News8 ro News6
S.:~ t u r day by Th e Oh o Vall e y
4t 9 h 2
West s kmg droppmg dum 7 30 - Romper
Room 6 Underdog 13
Publ sh ng Compa n y
1 11
my's smgleton queen An B 00 - Capt Kangaroo
Nmth So u th v u! nt: ta ble
Court St
Pom eroy Oh o
10 New Zoo Revuel J Sesam e Street 33
other club fmesse saw dum 8 30 - Tennessee Tuxedo 6 Jack La La nne 13
457 69 Bus ness O ff n Phon e
"e st
Nurth Easl Suuth
9912156 Edr tor al Phone 99 2
my 's queen droppm g to 9 oo - Paul Di xon 4 Phil Donahue IS , Ben Casey 13 Romper
I NT
:7 157
East's
kmg Back came a
Pass
Room 8 Peyton Place 13 What Every Woman Wants to
Dble
2
•
Secon d c lass pos tage pod at
Know 3 Timmy &amp; Lassie 6 Mr Rogers 33 Capta in
Pass
Pass
South
s IO·spot fmesse
spade
Pass
Pomer oy Ohr o
Kangaroo 10
N a t ong t a d ver l r':i ng
Pass
was covered by West s Jack
9
30
- Truth or Conseq 3 Mike Do uglas6 One L1fe to Live 13
r e pr esenta l11t1e
Bo ll n ellr
and a th1rd club was led
Openmg lead - •7
Electnc Co 33 My Three Sons 8
Gat ag her Inc 1:7 East 42nd
Dummy's ace had to be 10 oo - Hathayoga 33 Dick Van Dyke 13 Dinah Shore 3 15
St New Yo rk C ty N ew York
Su b sc r rp tr o n rat es
De
played
Lucille Ball 8 10
B•
Oswald
&amp;
James
Jacobv
l tvered b-, c arr1er where
South
went
after
diamonds
10 30 - Concentratron 3 15 Phr l Donahu e 4 Love Amerr can
... va ta bl e 50 cent s per .veek
The only real disadvantage by the normal play of lead
Style 6 Amateurs Gu1de to Love 10 Split Second 13 My
By Motor Rou te whe re carr er
of the Staym an two club mg to h1s ace and hnessmg
Three Sons 10 Split Secord 13 Beverly Hlllbill~es B In
serv1ce not a va il abl e One
School Instruction 33
mo nt h ll 75 By ma r n Oh o convention IS that an ale1 t \l)e jack That lost to the
and W Va One year Sl A 00
- Sale of the Century 3 15 Family Affatr 8 10 love
opponent mav double th e queen and East cashed h1s 11 00
S x month s $7 25 Three
American Style 13 , Communique 6
arllflClal
two'
club
b1d
for
last club for two tricks down 11 30 - Hollywood Squares 4 15, 3 love of life 8 10 Bewitched
mo nth s S4 50 Sub sc rtpl 10n
lead d~rec tmg purposes
pr ce me tud es Svnoay T m es
6, 13, Sesame Sf JJ
If South had stopped to
Se nltn e l
Not that we approve of thmk at tnck one he would 12 00 - Jeopardy 3, 15 Bob Braun's 50 50 Club 4 News 10 13
Jackie Oblinger B, Password 6
East's double of two clubs have brought home hts con
12
30
- 3 W's Game 3 lS Password 6, Search for Tomorrow B
tract m sptte of losmg the
SIDE GLANCES
Second 6 Electric Co 33
'
by Gill Fox d1amond fmesse He should 1 0010- Split
News 3, All My Children 6, 13 Divorce Court 8 Fllp-t
have gone nght up With
At the Fair 10
PI'
dummy' s ace of clubs and 1 JO - Let' sMakeADeal6 13 AsTheWorldTurns8 10 Three
On AMatch 3 4 15 Designing Women 33
go ne after diamonds at tnck
two
2 00 - DaysofOurllvesJ 4 15 NewlywedGamel3 V~rg ln 1 a
Graham6 love Splendored Th ing 8 10 Folk Guitar 33
East would take hiS queen
2
30
- Doctors 3, 4, 15 Daflng Game 13 Guiding l1ghl 8 10
and lead back a spade but
Insight 33
'
South would clatter w1th hiS 3 00 - Another World 3 4 ll Genera I Hospital 6 13 Secret
ace and cash out h1s red su1t
Storm B 10 Growing Up 33
wtnners Four d1amonds plus 3 30- Return to Peyton Place 3 4 15 Edge of Night a 10 One
Life to live 6, Jeff's Collie 13 Episode Acflon 33
three hearts plus two black
aces would come to the 4 00 - Mr Cartoon 3, Somerset 4 15 , Huckleberry Hound 6
Sesame 51 33 Batman 8 Mov ie "711 Ocean Drive" 10'
mag1c number of nme
Fllntstones 13
(NIWSPAPUt ENTERPRISf ASSN )
4 30 - Green Acres 3 Merv Griff in 4 , I love Lucy 6 Death
Valley Days 8 Password 13 Andy Griffllh 15
5 00 - Wagon Tra1n 3 Big Valley 6, Mer v Griffin 8 Mister
Rogers 33, Tarzan 13 Dick Van Dyke 15
l 30 - Eiectnc Co 33 Ma rshal Dillon 15
The h•dd1ng has been
6 00 - News 3, 4, B 10, IS Truth or Conseq 6 1 Dream ol
\\lest
North
East
Jeannie 13 Hathayoga 33
l¥
Dbte
Pa,.
6 Jo-NSCnews3 415 ABCNews6, 13 CBSNews8 10 Folk
Dble
Pa ss
Pass
Guitar 33
' '
Pass
3•
Pass
7 00 - Course Of Dlrr T1mes 33 lets Make ADea!J Dick Van
Pass
4 "Pass
Dyke 4 What s My Line' B Big Red Jubilee 15 News 6
Wild, Wild West 13
Pass
4•
Pass
7 30 - Dragnet 8, In The Know 10 Chapter 33 , To Tell The
You South hold
Truth 6 Hollywood Squares 3 Ohio's Greatest Show 4 Wild
.8743¥2 t AK943 .76~
K1ngdom 10
'
What do you do now?
8 00 - NBC Adventure Theatre3 15, 4 My World and Welcome
To liB 10 JeanShepherd'samerlcaJJ ; KldPower6 13
A-Pa..;s Your par In e r has
8
30 - My Three Sons 8 10 Jazz Set 33 , Three Day Night 6 13
either a-one era.zy or 1s trying to
9
00
- Longstreet6, 13 Ironside 3, 4 15, Hollywood Televl~lon
fCt;t ro u spade slam Your spades
Theatre 33 Mov1e Apache Uprising" 8, 10
are too weak for IRJ furtht:r
tO 00 - Owen Marshall 13 News 20 Bobby Darin 3 4 15 Paul
hid
Muchins 33 Oral Roberts 6
TODA \' S QUESTION
11 OO - News3,4,6 10 13, IS
II 30 - Joonny Carson 3, 4, 15 Dick Cavett 6, Movle • Director
Instead of h1ddrng four spades
John Frankenheimer" 8, "Serpent of tho Nile" 10 •A
you r partner has b1d four hearts
Millionaire for Christy" 13
'
"What's another one of the element. betldtt oxy. over your £our d iamonds What
IOO-Ntw~4
NORTH
. Q
¥ Q743
tKI OR7"

BY KEITH WISECUP
Metgs High School s dean of
Southeastern Oh10 Alhlehc
League football coaches
Charles Chancey has 12 lettermen back from last year's 7
2-1 Marauder squad
ThiS 1972 squad has the
fewest semors (13 ) smce the
Marauders became a team
Jumors comprise the majority
of the squad (27) and there are
14 sophomores
The Marauders lost 20
semors from last year and 19 of
22 slartmg pos1hons Me1gs,
the top wmner percentagew1se
of all the SEOAL gnd teams
smce 1967, lost to Iron ton, 2U,
Athens, 31.0, and lied Pt
Pleasant ~ They were $-2 m
U1e league good for a he for
th~rd as Ironton and Athens
lied for the champtonshlp on 61 reCOldS
'Thmgs look a httle shaky;
sa1d Coach Chancey as h~
looked over hiS squad restmg
Wlderneath a tree takmg a
mid-afternoon break 1n the
scorchmg temperature
Chancey has an mcurable
tendency - probably a good
one - to put on the ' we need
sympathy ' s1gn for the med1a
Every year smce 1967 the
Marauders have been p1cked to
do httle mayhem to anybody
before the season starts But
annually the Marauders knock
off some real good clubs And
they've never had a losmg
season
So far th1s year, 1t IS the
same old story
They'll do
nothmg except maybe wm a
couple of non league games
and a league v1ctory here or
the re '
The only catch th1s year lS
that maybe that ll be nght
Me1gs m1ght not do anythmg
But let's hope they do
The Vllal positions that have
tu be filled w1th special
ablhtl es are m the Me1gs' offense
The lallback, who carnes the
ball around 25 hmes per game
will probably he 160 lb semor
Chuck Faulk Last year 1t was
Mark Wl lhatns now an
alwnnus
The wmgback a blocker and
occasiOnal rW!ner, IS up for
grab s among several can didates the leaders appear to
be 140 lb JUIIWr M1ck Ash 130

l 1n -

N.-...

n

worked the rest of the game,
gut hiS mnth save
The Reds added an msurance
f1fth run m the moth on Bill
Plummer s home run
OK To Print
The run came off reliever
M1ke Marshall, the first he had
g1ven up m the last 29 2-3 mmngs It was the fll'st homer he
had g1ven up m 81 lnnmgs
The Reds and the Pittsburgh
P~rates , leaders of the National
League East by 11\2 games,
got the go-ahead Tuesday to

MAJOR

LEAGUE

STANDINGS

By United Press lnternatronal
Nat1ona I League
East
wtpctgb
P1ttsburgh
73 42 635
New York
61 53 535 11'12
Chicago
62 56 529 12'h
St Louis
56 59 487 17
Montreal
53 62 461 20
Philadelphia 43 73 371 JO'h
West
wlpctgb
Cincinnati
73 43 629
Houston
66 53 555 81(2
Los Angeles 61 54 530 11 1h
Atlanta
54 66 450 21
San Francisco 52 67 437 22 1h
San Diego
45 71 388 28
Tuesday's Results
Clnclnnetl 5 Montreal 3
New York 4 Houston 2
Atlanta 11 Phlla 7
Los Ang 1 Sf Louis 0
Chicago 4 San Diego 3
Pittsburgh 1 San Fran 0
Today's probable P1tchers
tAll Trmes EDT)
Cincinnati (Grimsley 10 6) at
Montreal (Morton 59), 8 OS
pm
Houston (Dierker 11 71 at
New York ( Koosman B9j, 2 OS
pm
Atlanta (Hardin 2 Ol at

SAVE $1.00 TANKFUL
UNDER MAJOR ETHYL

YOU CAN1 BUY BETTER
SO WHY PAY MORE
at Certified Gas Stations
.

538 W. Mein

..:.

begm pnntmg World Setles
tickets
The league champ10nsh1p
series Will begm Saturday, Oct
7 - three days after the close
of the regular season
The World Series will begm
Saturday, Oct H
Ten other clubs were
authomed by Baseball
Comrmsstoner Bowte Kuhn to
hegm pr1nt1ng tickets for the
league championship ltl'ies,
mcludmg the Clevellnd Indians m the Amer~can 1Aque

Pomeroy, 0.

Philadelphia (Twitchell J 4)

7 35 p m

Sf Louis (Durham 1 51 at Los
Angeles !S1nger 4 12), 11 p m
Ch1cago (Pappas 9 71 at San
Diego (Grell 5 13), 10 30 p m
Plltsburgh (Moose 9 7J at San
Francisco (Barr 4 7) 4 p m
Thursdoy's Games
Cincinnati at Montreal
(Only qame scheduled!

American League
East
w I pet gb
Detroit
63 55 534
112
Baltimore
62 55 530
New York
60 55 522 1'12
Boston
59 56 513 2112
Cleveland
56 61 479 6'12
Milwaukee 45 71 388 17
West
wtpctgb
Oakland
69 48 590
Chicago
68 48 586 il2
M1nnesota
60 54 526 7112
Kansas City 55 59 482 12'12
California
52 65 444 17
Texas
47 69 405 21'12
Tuesday's Results
California 2 Bait 0
Cleveland 3 Mlnn 2
Texas 2 Milwaukee 1
Boston 10 Kan City 7
Oakland 6 Detroit 3
Chicago S New York 4
Today'spro!Nible Pitchers
(All Times EDT)
Boston !Siebert 10 91 at
Kansas City (Nelson 6 4), 8 JO
pm
New York (Stoltlemyre 12 14)
at Chfcago !Wood 21111, 1 15
pm
Oakland (Blue 5 71 at Detroit
(Timmerman 8 10), 9 p m
Minnesota (Woodson 11 10) at
Cleveland (Dunning 2 1), 7 30
pm
f· a.~~'r::~~Iat Pa~~~ 1656 7 ;\
pm
Texas (Broberg 5 111 at
Milwaukee (Lon borg l1 71. 8 30
P m Thur1Dy'l ~me•
Taxas at Milwaukee
(Only game s.:hedoledl

!!

By BILL MADDEN
UP! Sports Writer
Those heated-up Amencan
League permant races reached
pressure-cooker proportions
Tuesday mghl, culrnmatmg
mth a wild brawl between
divur10n leaders Oakland and
Detroit and fourth-place
Boston mching to w1thin 212
games of the lead m the East
The Athletics mamtamed
their Western DlVlSIOn lead-if
not the~r composure- by
boWictng the Eastern-leading
Tigers, 6-3, but not before both
benches emptied m a wild
round of fisticuffs m the
seventh mnmg
The fracas began when Tiger
pitcher Bill Slayback, who had

already thrown one wild p1tch,
hurled another behmd the head
of the A s' Angel Mangual As
w1rmmg p1tcher Jollll Odom,
who was on second, advanced
to thl!'d and Slayback came m
to cover the plate, Mangual
suddenly ran out to meet him,
began throwmg punches and
then tackled hun
General Free-For-AU
That brought both bencbes
and bullpensontothe held for a
general free.for-all that took
nearly 15 mmutes before order
could be restored The crowd of
30,490 added to the commotion
by showermg paper cups and
dehr1s on the As as they
returned to the1r benches

Elsewhere, the Red Sox
made matters even tighter ln
the East w1th a 1~7 v1ctory
over Kansas City as Baltunore
and New York ]omed the
Tigers m defeat The Or~oles
fell, 2-0, to Califorma while the
Yankees dropped a 5-4 deciSion
to Ch1cago and the White Sox
kept pace mth Oakland in the
West In the other two games,
Cleveland edged Minnesota, 32, and Texas nipped
Milwaukee, 2-1
In National League action,
the New York Mets downed
Houston, 4-2, Cincmnati topped
Montreal, 5-3, Atlanta outslugged Phlladelphta, 11-7,
Ch1cago rupped San D1ego, 4-3,

Phipps Uncertain Starter
HIRAM, Oh10 (UPI ) Cleveland Browns coach Nick
Skor1ch says he has not made
up hur mmd wh'e ther to start
M1ke Ph1pps or veteran B1ll
Nelsen at quarterback 1n
Saturday's exhibition agamst
the Mmnesota VIkings
"I S8ld all along that Nelson
needs three games to get ready for the season and that
means he'll play Saturday, "
Skor1ch S8ld "! don't know
whether he'll start yet We
haven't fully dec1ded that "

International League Standings
By United Press International
W L Pet GB
Charleston
)4 54
578 LouiSville
74 57 565 1'17
69 62 527 6'12
Rochester
Tidewater
68 63 519 7'12
Toledo
66 65 504 91
12
Syracuse
61 70 466 14'h
Richmond
59 12 450 16'12
Peninsula
50 ,78 391 24
Tuesday's Rosults
Charleston 9 Richmond 2 (1st)
Charleston 7 Richmond 1 (2nd)
Loursvllle 9 Syracuse 6
Peninsula 5 Tidewater 1
Rochester 3 Toledo 2 ( 11 Inns)
WREN NAMED

I'HILADELPIDA

(UPI)-

The Pblladelphia PblWe8 have
named Bob Wren, who sent 51
players Into professional ball
cklrlng uuccesaful Z4 years as
lallball coadl at Oblo UnlvtrII~, u 1 IP'Cial alllllgnment
lnllructGr 1JK1 &lt;IOIICh Tuetlday.

Skor~ch

was asked 1f he was
pleased With the progress of
Phipps who has started all
three exhtbltton losses
"He hasn't come aloog as
fast as I'd hoped," satd Skorlch, "but 'then all of his protr
lems have not been hls fault "
Skor~eh S8ld hts mam dlsappomtment so far has been the
Browns rWinmg game - or
lack of 1t
"It's our number one obJec·
ti ve thur year to make us a
contender ," sa1d Skor1ch
"We've had to play the k1ds to
find out if they could help Of
course we've been working
wtth a lot of young llnemen,
too This hampered Phipps
because of the lack of a
balanced attack "

Pittsburgh shaded San
Franc1sco, 1-0, and Los
Angeles topped St Louts, 1.0
Homers by Joe Rud1, Odom
and Mangual proVIded the A's
With the necessary fl!'epower to
deny Mickey Lobch h•s 20th
VIctory Mangual, who was
ejected along wtth Slayback
and Ike Brown, had a three-run
blast m the fifth
Yaz Celebrates
Carl Yastrzemsk1 celebrated
his 33rd birthday by crackmg
his fourth homer of the season
m joining Carlton FISk and
John Kennedy mth two runsbatted-to apmce as the Red Sox
outlasted the Royals Nolan
Ryan 's four-lntter prevented
the slwnpmg Or1oles from
gammg any ground as Bob

Oh ver drove m one Angel run
and scored the other
Dtck Allen's 31st bomer mth
Buddy Bradford aboard m the
fifth hfted the Whtte Sox to a
come-from -behmd trtumph
over the Yankees M1ke An·
drews also drove m two runs as
the Yankees blew a ~ lead
Gaylord Perry chalked up
his 19th victory for Cleveland
w1th the help of defensiVe
replacement Tommy McCraw
McCraw smgled home Buddy
Bell w1th the w1rmmg run after
two were out m the mnth lnmng
In the showdown of cellardwellers, RICh Hand and Casey
Cox combmed on a two-hitter
as Texas squeezed by
Milwaukee

MASON BOWUNG CENTER
MASON, W, VA.

Skor~ch

sa1d he has been
"closmg the gap" m search for
backup men for ruruung backs
Leroy Kelly and Bo Scott
"Ken Brown bas done real
well and so has Bo Cornell,"
said Skor~ch "Billy Lefear has
great ab1lity, but he's so green
and he 's hurt us because of
thlS "
Some of the br~ght spots IIl·
elude llnebacking and the defensive secondary," sa1d Skorlch
"The passmg game lS commg along, too," sa1d Skor1ch
"And we're especially pleased
w1th the way some of the ktds
have progressed Guys like
Bubba Pena, Doug D!eken,
Tom Darden, Lester Sims and
Cliff Brooks "

BOWLING
LEAGLII:S
Now Being Formed
PHONE

SPICIAL
IIOSI' AllY
SIZE

ONLY

'995
Plus C.atng

GENERAL TIRE SALES
N.2ndA-..

M-7161

�3-The lllllly Sentinel, Mlddleport-l'&lt;lmeroy, o., August 23, 11172

2- The Dally Sent mel, Mlddleport-Pomero) 0 August Z:l t'l/2

,,

EDITORIALS

•

~~

;:

.

'

Education Expenses

~

'&lt;

Ji)JShorted Vi~~. .Y..~.~ Gets Break
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11 1111 lu 11 h ~trld llrt
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Cliche's Last Stand, 1 Maybe

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rehun to sc hool tilt bt11W i tl s 11 p~ns - $ 1 7:) d nw nl h lot

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"If II \1 U r/ d h~ t \ l ht ~ t1 tp Ill 11 II :-;

BRUCE BIOSSAT

Needs to Mend Fences

Agnew

•

'7 6 Is the Big Talk
Jh BHll I BlOSS I I

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Voice along Br'Way
BY JACK 0 BRIAN
S1RIPPER PROMISES
SOTHERN EXPOSURE
NEWYORK (KFS) - Most dynamic of &lt;i ll
oldtunc str1ppers Georgw Sotliern 11 11l bare all
m her autob wg A theatnc"l muons fun d fu1
mdagenl members was used to bury one
member kn own w1delv as havmg 1aul ts and
vaul ts of scalper s 1ce slas hed away
sumewhe1e Hed) La ma rr dl 57 has mOJ e- than
enuugh left to keep realtor Robell Alton m
ecs ta sy
Black H wood actJ css dec rded tu
ha ve !lie baby but won ! tell Papa s na me )et
Ca1 ncg1c Hall will crack down on potheads
al future 1ock fests 1 hey vandaliZe too much
property No danger 1n man )uana eh?
Budd) Hackett threatens to hop on the wagon
Lots of fn endly encouragement
Susan
Hayward w11l be a grandma agam (2nd ) m Nov
ABC-TV's spmmng off 1ls film subs1d1a ry
CBS next '
Tlunk Sen Torn Eagleton 1sn 1 a hero' He
s1gned a menu at La Scala here and ow ner
Roberto V10la had 1t fr amed and hung w1 llun
hours Chicago Maym Daley s buymg a home
'" Ireland HIS pop came from there
ronv
Newlcy and stewardess Dareth R1ch ha1e
everytlun • but mamage '" their plans they tell
pals Jo 1n Ma rie) i\h MacGraw s fathc1 m
' Love Sto1 and the H wood pi oducer "hu had
h1s h01 se b 1eaded rn I he Godfather, ended
h1s O\\n love ocy h1s Wife of 22 years IS
d1vorcmg htm
Joe D1Maggw keeps h1s slar~ ra figure
Simply enough at Gallag her s, a !anned, flt Joe
downed rare chopped steak, salad and black
coffee . asade fr om the snm\ on the roof , Joe's
the same as 25 years ago Songstress Helen
O'Connell s daughter Jackre has a new husband
sculptor Rafe /\fleck, her second lime around
Shirley MacLame of poht•cs and flim s m a
Women 's Wear mterv1ew ca lled her husband of
18 years "my best friend Meanwlulc another
best fmnd , wrtter Pete Ham1ll was Identified
as the typmg nmse m another room
Couple of showbiZ promoters dec1ded not to
offer chessty Bobby Fischer an&gt; b1g lout He's

dltlltH/(

mak1ng lumself too unpopul.u and folks wun t
pay JUSI to boo II 1m one !old us N Y Cung
Herman Badill o told Bill Chan of the Gold Co m
I m gomg to be the nex t mayor of New York
Yuung Wmslon mav ball out MGMfrom all
tlre unnerv mg 1 umors
T1ckctrun, !he computenzed theatncal !Jekel
p1 •]ecl \\ as a bleto ld enllfy~scalpe l - and ge t
hm r con11cted
fhe fmal cleanu p of !eg1t
I!Jcaler bu&lt;offl ces 1sn I lou far away It's still
l drnpant but \\ll lwul enough hats dun ng the
summc1dold1 um (no Bdll ) show IS scllr ng out
i\11 Carnev s Pr 1sone1 of 2nd i\ ve IS huldmg
up as the b•ggest pla y lnt)
The boxofflce
problcm has been a1ound for decades back
when b11&lt;off1ce II easurers were gelling !90 a
11 cck 11ne upenl) flaun ted a huge hume at Sands
Puml brg as He1 ber t Bayard Swope's
The new Uus Theater (on the Slle of the b1g
uld Ca p1 tul 1heater ) Wlll be Bdwy s b1ggest
leg1 1house - I 900 seals II opens th1s fall w1th
a rock mus1cal Galactra produced by the
late Rube Goldberg s son George W Gemge
and Barnard Strauss
Art Ca rney and Bm
bara Barn e w1ll lea-e the Bdwy '2nd Ave
cas t m Sept to p1ck up all the b1g bread on th e
Cuasland m Clncago No Bdwy replacements
se I yet Freda Payne ba1 ed all for two nekkld
mags Pla1 boy and Pen thouse
fhe latter
ma kes lhe fo1 lllel seem d1gn1fled as Nat I
Geugra plnc
TVs changmg folks Bill Bixby s new
Panunoun t contract prOJects a senes about a
man ull h t" o w1ves
One uf the grea t Jazzmen of all t1me was
Gate Frega \\ho pla)ed bass fiddle w1 th Les
Brown Paul Wlnteman and last and most, w1lh
J ue Muoney s celebrated avant group, Gate qu1t
Joe and Jazz Ill 1948 to become a Capuchm
monk He s nowFather JohrtFrega 0 F M Cap
For the pas t year he's been at St Elizabeth
Hospital 1n Washmgton workmg w1th add1cts,
alcuhrrhcs ana the relar ded and JUSI was named
chaplam of the Huntsville State PriSon m Texas
He was ordamed at Beacon N Y , and has
scads of relahves m New Jersey

::;
'

,

'

N

.. ·:::: w. xs..:.~~

'&amp;*

Helen

Us.

::::

j

~'}$'"

Marauders Building New Machine for 1972 Race

.. .: &lt;o"~.J&gt; :::!-» ~ ~,

~

~elp ;"'

By Helen Hottel

••

J",

WED IN A DAZE HE WANTS OUT
Dear Helen
A r P mamed us on a wild weekend tnp to Las Vegas It
seemed a good 1dea at the time but I adnut I was partly smashed
We 've been fightmg togeU1er e1ght mooths and I want out,
but she doesn 't I've remembered a couple of techmcaht1es that
m1ght get me an annulment What do you think'
F1rst when the J P read off the usual Jumbo my mmd
wandered, and when he asked ' Do you take th1s woman etc '"
I JUSt nodded my head, so he sa1d, "I do," promptmg me, and I
sa1d Yeah Later we kidded each other about wh1ch man my
w1fe' mamed - me or the guy who sa1d 'I do" (That was
before regret set m1)
Second, I d1scover m looking over the hcense that my name
ISn't spelled r~ght They've got 1t RJ&gt;bert Srmth Instead of Rupert
Snuthe, and Robert Sm1th could he ten thousand other men (The
J P had been tipplmg too ) I s1gned several thmgs that rught, but
my stgnature IS a scrawl when I'm drunk
An annulment ur eas1er and cheaper than a divorce Is 11
posSible' - RUPERT SMITHE (Not my real name but you get
the 1dea)
Dear Rupert
Probably not but only a lawyer can tell you for sure Maybe
he m1ght make 'unsoWld mmd' a case for annulment - H

+++

Dear Helen
My husband 's brothers are b1g burly men who thmk throwmg
the1r bab1es h1gh m the a1r and catchmg them, or balancmg a
rune-month-&lt;Jid by one foot (also h1gh above !hell' heads ) 1s fine
JUSt because she laughs
Their w1ves thmk 11e are "overprotective" because I keep
po1sons m unreachable places and medicmes locked up I don t
leave razor blades kmves or sc1ssors around, and thmk 1t's
better to put candy away than constantly say "No-no '
The1r standard remark IS "They have to learn some t1me,"
and they llllply that we ll e1ther brmg up a s1ssy or a child who
rebels and leaves home early
I ve got to the pomt where I'm gomg to say somethmg nasty
1f they don t stop harpmg How can !shut them up' -YOUNG
MOTHER
Dear Mother
Why don t you throw the book at them ' Dr Spock s book, I
mean - H
Dear Helen
About the woman who was less than thrilled when her
husband brought home llckets to a hve baseball game (saymg
she had enough TV sports Without THAT I
I'm disgusted w1th females who expect support and love
from their husbands but who can t g1ven them a weekend to
enJOY sports Why don t these self1sh dames become mterested m
thc1r mens hobbles s1t down and enJOY the games too' Why
wast e tlllle sulkin g because they get less aUenllon than the TV
screen?
A woman who star :S up the vacuum orotherw1se consp1res to
rwn her husband s relaxallon deserves a man who gets his
relaxation' away from home'
M) mama ge •sn't perfect but 1t's happy because I've
learned to g1ve as well as receiVe, and we both go on the theory
that when 'love IS bhnd ' to mmor faults ll sees the major
blessmgs tw1ce as clearly - A S
Dear A
Happy football season to you , too
(As one of those people who can't get enthralled With spec
Ialor sports, I take my m epress1ble force out on the typewnter
when my husband becomes an Immovable object m front of the
Saturday TV screen ) - H

WIN AT BRIDGE

Lead Directing Beats Game

-

By Paul Crabtree

Last tune, we were talkmg about the relative mer1ts of
baseball and football, and 1was argu1ng the cause for ba!eball as
the better sport to watch (although I am totally addicted to
football, too)
There are many reasons - enumerated yesterday - why I
prefer baseball, but the most unportsnt one I saved for
discUSSIOn today
In maJor league baseball, the difference between wmmng a
permant or World Series and being a scorned, cellar~wellmg
bunch of bums urexactly one game out of f1ve
The heroes, the toasts of the town, the champs, will win about
three out of every flVJl games
The losers, the last-placers, the untouchables, still Wlll wm
about two games out of f1ve
Therefore, a team that can play 6110 baseball 1s almost
certam to wm a pennant, and a team pla)'lng 400 ball1s gomg to
be the worst of the als&lt;H'ans
(Look at the standings Any f~rst-place team playmg at 600
many of the four divur1ons would sllll be in lll'st place - as thls ur
written -and any team at 4110 would still be in the cellar There
are exceptions, w1th the new expanSloo clubs often playmg well
below 400 thel!' fll'st seasons, or a streak hke the Cleveland In·
dians' lll-13 bmge m 1954, but the rule holds true )
Football and basketball just cannot make the same claun
The AFLmakes1tan article of faith that any given team can
beat any other gtven team on any given Sunday - but the
champs are gomg to lose not more than a couple or three games
man average season, and the tall-enders will not wm more than
two or three
College football 1s dommated by the Wldefeated dynast1es
each season Basketball, up to the pro level, boasts several teams
who have lost no games (or only one or two ) until the armual
tournaments start reducmg the ranks
But in baseball, the difference between a bum and a gemus IS
the manager or owner who can field a team that can wm one
extra game out of a set of f1ve
That's what led the laughable New York Mets from a
collectiOn of ~!owns , retreads and never-quits in the mld.Sl.lties
to the Amazm' Mets, champions of all they surveyed m 1969
It s what caused last year's proud San FranciSco G1ants to
fall from dms10nal champs tostrugglers trymg to hang out of the
cellar this year Also w1tness the riSe of the White Sox and the
decline and fall of the Angels
What makes the difference be tween 600 and 400 teams •
That's ooe of the myster~es - and fascmat10ns - of baseball
Sometimes 1t's the sunple acqull'mg of good personnel at key
spots (the maturmg of the Mets' Tom Seaver and Jerry
Kossman), sometunes the change of a teams philosophy of play
(the Reds' sh1ft from slow-movmg power to speed and daring)
and sometimes an mtang~ble, such as Chuck Tanners turnabout
of the While Sox
It's a great game - even if 1t's not the only one

+++

ON THE TV DIAL Ftnal sessiOn of the GOP conventiOn

Television Log
Programs for Tonight

'

ltn, hydroren, mtrOP'An •ntf "'"n ...:..... .,n

gone from tackle The ends last
year, Larry Harmon and Jeff
Murris, are also gone
Other Marauders trymg for
startmg poslhons are semors
Jerry Coleman, Jon Dillard
(probable defens1ve starter ),
and Steve Jewell
The other Jumors are Robert
B~rchfleld, Ron Couch, Melvin
Cremeens (probable defensiVe
starter), Charles Diehl, Andy
Enghsh (posstble defensive
starter). Carl Rendncks, M1ke
Hoffman, Dana Johnson, Mike
McDaniel, Mark Moms,
Charles Neece, Mark Oller,
Terry Pickens, Robert Qualls,
Joe Rosenbaum, Paul Searls,
Harold S1sson, B1ll Slack
(possible defensive starter),
Jay Warner, and Dave Wolfe
The sophomores are R1ck
Bohn, Woody Call, Lonme
Coates, Greg France, Dan
!Iamson, M1ke Haley, Greg
McKmney, Jeff Musser, Jack
01ler, Bob Richards, John Pat
R1ley, Gerry White, and Terry
Whitlatch
Lettermen from last year are
Vaughan, Weber, Werry, Ash,
Chafm, Chaney, D1llard,
Eason, C Faulk R Faulk, L
McKmney, and McLaughlin
Coach Chancey's assistants
th1s year are Robert Me1er,
Fenton Taylor, DonD1xon, and
John Bentley
The Meigs schedule 1s as
follows, (last year's scores m
parentheses I
Sept. 8
Reemelin (0-H)
Sept 15
Belpre (12· 6)
Sept 22
at Logan (28- 8)
Sept 29
Wellston (38- 0)
Oct 6
at Ironton ( 6-221
Oct 13
Jackson (32-16)
Oct 20
at Waverly (14- I)
Oct 27
Athens ( 1).31)
Nov 3
Gaiiipolts (14-12)
Nov. 10 PI Pleasant( 8- 8)
Seven home games, three
away.

THIS IS HOW, hopefully, a winning footbaU
team is rebuilt at Meigs High. In the top picture,
Head Coacb Charles Chancey can be discerned
(sans any shin&gt; giving individual instruction to a
defensive lineman. Middle picture: Set, and
Hike. Below, the play bas started In Chancey's
"controlled" but hard hitting drill in which the
tmttal charge IS delivered full-go by offensive
and defens1ve units, but tacklmg IS under wraps

Here is where play is perfected.

Reds Ahead by 8112 Both American League Races Heat Up

WEDNESDAY, AUG 23
6 oo - News Wea ther Sports 3 4 8 10 15 Truth or Conseq ,
I Dream of Jea nnre 13 Halhayoga 33

6 30 - NB C News 3 4 15 ABC News 6 13 CBS News B 10
Brtdge 33
7 00 - News Weather Sports 6 10 W1ld W1ld Wes t 13

MONTREAl. (UP I)
An other game, another game
ahead, was the way Tuesday
mght went
The Cmcmnat1 Reds beat the
Montreal Expos S-3 here At
New York, the Mets beat the
Houston Astros 4-2
The combmat10n put the
Reds 8\2 games m front of
HQuston Ill the Nat10nal League
West
Pete Rose Immediately
JWllped on Montreal starter
Carl Morton, smghng to lead
off the first lnmng Wlth two
out, Johnny Bench homered,
hiS 28th, to g1ve Cmcmnat1 a 2-0
lead
More Home Runs
The Reds went ahead 3-0 on
Rose's fourth horne run of the
season m the s1xth mnlng And
before that Inning was over It
was 4.0, as Joe Morgan got on
base on an error
Morgan's pop fly to th1rd was
missed by Bob BBlley, Morgan
took second on Bobby Tolan's
smgle, went to thll'd when
Bench hit mto a double play
and scored on Tony Perez'
smgle
The run proved to be the
wmmng one as the Expos came
up with all three of their runs In
tbNeventh mnmg on two home
rWls Hal Breeden homered
w1th the bases empty and Ron
Woods duplicated hur effort
wtth Ken Singleton aboard
The home run barrage
chased 'tinclnnatl starter Ross
Grimsley He got credit for h1s
lith wln of the year m 17
declstons Pedro Borbon, who

M1 les tones of Progress 33 D ck Va n Dyke 4 What s My Line
8 Mayor s Report 15 Pelt tc:oat Junct ron 3

7

30 - Episode Act•on 33 To Tell The Truth 6 Repu bl ican
Con ventron 3 4 8 10 15

B 00 - The Super 6 13 To Be Ann ounced 33

B JO- CornerBar6 13 FJidOdysseyJ J
9 00 - Marty Feldman Comed y Ma ch rne 13

21

do you do now?

lb se niOr Roger Pearch, or 125
lb junwr Robbie Rams Ron
Smith was the wingback a year
ago
AI fullback, well, nobody
kn ows Alan McLaughlin, 145
lb jWilor, and Robbie Eason,
180 lb JUmor, were the top
candidates before summer
prac tice Coach Chancey has
been rW!mng a last year's
parthme
hneman
and
linebacker, Dallas Weber, 175
lb semor, at fullback But the
change from guard could be too
much m one year for the
powerful, talented Weber Tiny
W1Ihams ran fullback last
year And he really ran 1t
The quarterback JOb IS m
good hands those of 175 lb
senwt
Andy
Vaughan
Vaughan ran the team well last
year and has looked bnlhant 1n
dulls
On the hne, 1t looks like
e1ther RICk Gaul, 150 lb semor,
or J D Story, 155lb Junior, at
center, Eddie Young handled
the chores last year
At guards, Lou McKinney,
170 lb semor, seems a sure bet
fur one, and the other IS up for
grabs w1th John Lehew, 160 lb
JUillOr, T1m Kmg, 1451b semor,
or Weber lf he doesn't play m
the backfield, or one of several
others
The tackles w11l probably be
returmng starters Mark
Werry 245 lb semor, and
Randy Faulk
265 lb
sophomore
Ends look to he Bill Chaney,
170 lb semor , Tom Lowery, 150
lb JWHor, and Randy Chafin,
150 lb semor, who have the
ms1de track But there are
sev e ral underclassmen
pushmg these three at thiS
pOsitiOn
The startmg guards lost from
last year were Ted Lehew and
Roger D1xon wh1le Fred Lee IS

and Tomorrow

w1th only four clubs to th e 9 30 - Republi can Conv entron 4 13
- Soul 33
km g Jack Should South have II10 00
oo - News3 4 News B 10 13 15
elected to pass and North to II 30 - Johnny Carson 3 4 15 Dtck Ca vett 6 M ov tes The
redouble l'&gt;orth would have
Pathf rnder 10 Duff y of San Quen f ln 13 Mov1e - To Be
Announced 8
mad e at least two odd and
olo A Q \0
p1obably managed to collect I 00 - News a nd Weather -4
WF.ST
EASl
an
overtnck but South d1d I 30 - Local News 13
• K J92
• 86 5 4
The Oat~ Sentinel
b1d
two spades and was
• J 8 f) )
If 92
THURSDAY AUGUST 24
DEVOTED TO THE
promptly
put m three no
t4 2
• Q5l
6 00 - Sunrrse Semrnar 4 Sacred Heart 10
INTEREST OF
trump
by
North
" 74 {
oloK J85
MEIGS MASON AREA
6 15 - Farmt1me 10 Fa rm Report 13
CHESTER L TANNEHILL
Three no-trump d1d not 6 20 - Paul Harvey 13
SOUTH (I) )
E )( et Ed
fa1 e very well South !messed 6 30 - Columbus Today 4 B1ble Answers B America s
.A IU7 l
ROBERT HOEFLICH
Problems 10
If
A
K
10
dummy s 10 of clubs at tnck
Cttv Ed1tor
6
45Corncob Report 3 Davy &amp; Goliath 13
t AJ 'I
one Back came a spade with
Puo r slled dally eHep t
7
oo
Today
3 4 15, CBS News8 ro News6
S.:~ t u r day by Th e Oh o Vall e y
4t 9 h 2
West s kmg droppmg dum 7 30 - Romper
Room 6 Underdog 13
Publ sh ng Compa n y
1 11
my's smgleton queen An B 00 - Capt Kangaroo
Nmth So u th v u! nt: ta ble
Court St
Pom eroy Oh o
10 New Zoo Revuel J Sesam e Street 33
other club fmesse saw dum 8 30 - Tennessee Tuxedo 6 Jack La La nne 13
457 69 Bus ness O ff n Phon e
"e st
Nurth Easl Suuth
9912156 Edr tor al Phone 99 2
my 's queen droppm g to 9 oo - Paul Di xon 4 Phil Donahue IS , Ben Casey 13 Romper
I NT
:7 157
East's
kmg Back came a
Pass
Room 8 Peyton Place 13 What Every Woman Wants to
Dble
2
•
Secon d c lass pos tage pod at
Know 3 Timmy &amp; Lassie 6 Mr Rogers 33 Capta in
Pass
Pass
South
s IO·spot fmesse
spade
Pass
Pomer oy Ohr o
Kangaroo 10
N a t ong t a d ver l r':i ng
Pass
was covered by West s Jack
9
30
- Truth or Conseq 3 Mike Do uglas6 One L1fe to Live 13
r e pr esenta l11t1e
Bo ll n ellr
and a th1rd club was led
Openmg lead - •7
Electnc Co 33 My Three Sons 8
Gat ag her Inc 1:7 East 42nd
Dummy's ace had to be 10 oo - Hathayoga 33 Dick Van Dyke 13 Dinah Shore 3 15
St New Yo rk C ty N ew York
Su b sc r rp tr o n rat es
De
played
Lucille Ball 8 10
B•
Oswald
&amp;
James
Jacobv
l tvered b-, c arr1er where
South
went
after
diamonds
10 30 - Concentratron 3 15 Phr l Donahu e 4 Love Amerr can
... va ta bl e 50 cent s per .veek
The only real disadvantage by the normal play of lead
Style 6 Amateurs Gu1de to Love 10 Split Second 13 My
By Motor Rou te whe re carr er
of the Staym an two club mg to h1s ace and hnessmg
Three Sons 10 Split Secord 13 Beverly Hlllbill~es B In
serv1ce not a va il abl e One
School Instruction 33
mo nt h ll 75 By ma r n Oh o convention IS that an ale1 t \l)e jack That lost to the
and W Va One year Sl A 00
- Sale of the Century 3 15 Family Affatr 8 10 love
opponent mav double th e queen and East cashed h1s 11 00
S x month s $7 25 Three
American Style 13 , Communique 6
arllflClal
two'
club
b1d
for
last club for two tricks down 11 30 - Hollywood Squares 4 15, 3 love of life 8 10 Bewitched
mo nth s S4 50 Sub sc rtpl 10n
lead d~rec tmg purposes
pr ce me tud es Svnoay T m es
6, 13, Sesame Sf JJ
If South had stopped to
Se nltn e l
Not that we approve of thmk at tnck one he would 12 00 - Jeopardy 3, 15 Bob Braun's 50 50 Club 4 News 10 13
Jackie Oblinger B, Password 6
East's double of two clubs have brought home hts con
12
30
- 3 W's Game 3 lS Password 6, Search for Tomorrow B
tract m sptte of losmg the
SIDE GLANCES
Second 6 Electric Co 33
'
by Gill Fox d1amond fmesse He should 1 0010- Split
News 3, All My Children 6, 13 Divorce Court 8 Fllp-t
have gone nght up With
At the Fair 10
PI'
dummy' s ace of clubs and 1 JO - Let' sMakeADeal6 13 AsTheWorldTurns8 10 Three
On AMatch 3 4 15 Designing Women 33
go ne after diamonds at tnck
two
2 00 - DaysofOurllvesJ 4 15 NewlywedGamel3 V~rg ln 1 a
Graham6 love Splendored Th ing 8 10 Folk Guitar 33
East would take hiS queen
2
30
- Doctors 3, 4, 15 Daflng Game 13 Guiding l1ghl 8 10
and lead back a spade but
Insight 33
'
South would clatter w1th hiS 3 00 - Another World 3 4 ll Genera I Hospital 6 13 Secret
ace and cash out h1s red su1t
Storm B 10 Growing Up 33
wtnners Four d1amonds plus 3 30- Return to Peyton Place 3 4 15 Edge of Night a 10 One
Life to live 6, Jeff's Collie 13 Episode Acflon 33
three hearts plus two black
aces would come to the 4 00 - Mr Cartoon 3, Somerset 4 15 , Huckleberry Hound 6
Sesame 51 33 Batman 8 Mov ie "711 Ocean Drive" 10'
mag1c number of nme
Fllntstones 13
(NIWSPAPUt ENTERPRISf ASSN )
4 30 - Green Acres 3 Merv Griff in 4 , I love Lucy 6 Death
Valley Days 8 Password 13 Andy Griffllh 15
5 00 - Wagon Tra1n 3 Big Valley 6, Mer v Griffin 8 Mister
Rogers 33, Tarzan 13 Dick Van Dyke 15
l 30 - Eiectnc Co 33 Ma rshal Dillon 15
The h•dd1ng has been
6 00 - News 3, 4, B 10, IS Truth or Conseq 6 1 Dream ol
\\lest
North
East
Jeannie 13 Hathayoga 33
l¥
Dbte
Pa,.
6 Jo-NSCnews3 415 ABCNews6, 13 CBSNews8 10 Folk
Dble
Pa ss
Pass
Guitar 33
' '
Pass
3•
Pass
7 00 - Course Of Dlrr T1mes 33 lets Make ADea!J Dick Van
Pass
4 "Pass
Dyke 4 What s My Line' B Big Red Jubilee 15 News 6
Wild, Wild West 13
Pass
4•
Pass
7 30 - Dragnet 8, In The Know 10 Chapter 33 , To Tell The
You South hold
Truth 6 Hollywood Squares 3 Ohio's Greatest Show 4 Wild
.8743¥2 t AK943 .76~
K1ngdom 10
'
What do you do now?
8 00 - NBC Adventure Theatre3 15, 4 My World and Welcome
To liB 10 JeanShepherd'samerlcaJJ ; KldPower6 13
A-Pa..;s Your par In e r has
8
30 - My Three Sons 8 10 Jazz Set 33 , Three Day Night 6 13
either a-one era.zy or 1s trying to
9
00
- Longstreet6, 13 Ironside 3, 4 15, Hollywood Televl~lon
fCt;t ro u spade slam Your spades
Theatre 33 Mov1e Apache Uprising" 8, 10
are too weak for IRJ furtht:r
tO 00 - Owen Marshall 13 News 20 Bobby Darin 3 4 15 Paul
hid
Muchins 33 Oral Roberts 6
TODA \' S QUESTION
11 OO - News3,4,6 10 13, IS
II 30 - Joonny Carson 3, 4, 15 Dick Cavett 6, Movle • Director
Instead of h1ddrng four spades
John Frankenheimer" 8, "Serpent of tho Nile" 10 •A
you r partner has b1d four hearts
Millionaire for Christy" 13
'
"What's another one of the element. betldtt oxy. over your £our d iamonds What
IOO-Ntw~4
NORTH
. Q
¥ Q743
tKI OR7"

BY KEITH WISECUP
Metgs High School s dean of
Southeastern Oh10 Alhlehc
League football coaches
Charles Chancey has 12 lettermen back from last year's 7
2-1 Marauder squad
ThiS 1972 squad has the
fewest semors (13 ) smce the
Marauders became a team
Jumors comprise the majority
of the squad (27) and there are
14 sophomores
The Marauders lost 20
semors from last year and 19 of
22 slartmg pos1hons Me1gs,
the top wmner percentagew1se
of all the SEOAL gnd teams
smce 1967, lost to Iron ton, 2U,
Athens, 31.0, and lied Pt
Pleasant ~ They were $-2 m
U1e league good for a he for
th~rd as Ironton and Athens
lied for the champtonshlp on 61 reCOldS
'Thmgs look a httle shaky;
sa1d Coach Chancey as h~
looked over hiS squad restmg
Wlderneath a tree takmg a
mid-afternoon break 1n the
scorchmg temperature
Chancey has an mcurable
tendency - probably a good
one - to put on the ' we need
sympathy ' s1gn for the med1a
Every year smce 1967 the
Marauders have been p1cked to
do httle mayhem to anybody
before the season starts But
annually the Marauders knock
off some real good clubs And
they've never had a losmg
season
So far th1s year, 1t IS the
same old story
They'll do
nothmg except maybe wm a
couple of non league games
and a league v1ctory here or
the re '
The only catch th1s year lS
that maybe that ll be nght
Me1gs m1ght not do anythmg
But let's hope they do
The Vllal positions that have
tu be filled w1th special
ablhtl es are m the Me1gs' offense
The lallback, who carnes the
ball around 25 hmes per game
will probably he 160 lb semor
Chuck Faulk Last year 1t was
Mark Wl lhatns now an
alwnnus
The wmgback a blocker and
occasiOnal rW!ner, IS up for
grab s among several can didates the leaders appear to
be 140 lb JUIIWr M1ck Ash 130

l 1n -

N.-...

n

worked the rest of the game,
gut hiS mnth save
The Reds added an msurance
f1fth run m the moth on Bill
Plummer s home run
OK To Print
The run came off reliever
M1ke Marshall, the first he had
g1ven up m the last 29 2-3 mmngs It was the fll'st homer he
had g1ven up m 81 lnnmgs
The Reds and the Pittsburgh
P~rates , leaders of the National
League East by 11\2 games,
got the go-ahead Tuesday to

MAJOR

LEAGUE

STANDINGS

By United Press lnternatronal
Nat1ona I League
East
wtpctgb
P1ttsburgh
73 42 635
New York
61 53 535 11'12
Chicago
62 56 529 12'h
St Louis
56 59 487 17
Montreal
53 62 461 20
Philadelphia 43 73 371 JO'h
West
wlpctgb
Cincinnati
73 43 629
Houston
66 53 555 81(2
Los Angeles 61 54 530 11 1h
Atlanta
54 66 450 21
San Francisco 52 67 437 22 1h
San Diego
45 71 388 28
Tuesday's Results
Clnclnnetl 5 Montreal 3
New York 4 Houston 2
Atlanta 11 Phlla 7
Los Ang 1 Sf Louis 0
Chicago 4 San Diego 3
Pittsburgh 1 San Fran 0
Today's probable P1tchers
tAll Trmes EDT)
Cincinnati (Grimsley 10 6) at
Montreal (Morton 59), 8 OS
pm
Houston (Dierker 11 71 at
New York ( Koosman B9j, 2 OS
pm
Atlanta (Hardin 2 Ol at

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UNDER MAJOR ETHYL

YOU CAN1 BUY BETTER
SO WHY PAY MORE
at Certified Gas Stations
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538 W. Mein

..:.

begm pnntmg World Setles
tickets
The league champ10nsh1p
series Will begm Saturday, Oct
7 - three days after the close
of the regular season
The World Series will begm
Saturday, Oct H
Ten other clubs were
authomed by Baseball
Comrmsstoner Bowte Kuhn to
hegm pr1nt1ng tickets for the
league championship ltl'ies,
mcludmg the Clevellnd Indians m the Amer~can 1Aque

Pomeroy, 0.

Philadelphia (Twitchell J 4)

7 35 p m

Sf Louis (Durham 1 51 at Los
Angeles !S1nger 4 12), 11 p m
Ch1cago (Pappas 9 71 at San
Diego (Grell 5 13), 10 30 p m
Plltsburgh (Moose 9 7J at San
Francisco (Barr 4 7) 4 p m
Thursdoy's Games
Cincinnati at Montreal
(Only qame scheduled!

American League
East
w I pet gb
Detroit
63 55 534
112
Baltimore
62 55 530
New York
60 55 522 1'12
Boston
59 56 513 2112
Cleveland
56 61 479 6'12
Milwaukee 45 71 388 17
West
wtpctgb
Oakland
69 48 590
Chicago
68 48 586 il2
M1nnesota
60 54 526 7112
Kansas City 55 59 482 12'12
California
52 65 444 17
Texas
47 69 405 21'12
Tuesday's Results
California 2 Bait 0
Cleveland 3 Mlnn 2
Texas 2 Milwaukee 1
Boston 10 Kan City 7
Oakland 6 Detroit 3
Chicago S New York 4
Today'spro!Nible Pitchers
(All Times EDT)
Boston !Siebert 10 91 at
Kansas City (Nelson 6 4), 8 JO
pm
New York (Stoltlemyre 12 14)
at Chfcago !Wood 21111, 1 15
pm
Oakland (Blue 5 71 at Detroit
(Timmerman 8 10), 9 p m
Minnesota (Woodson 11 10) at
Cleveland (Dunning 2 1), 7 30
pm
f· a.~~'r::~~Iat Pa~~~ 1656 7 ;\
pm
Texas (Broberg 5 111 at
Milwaukee (Lon borg l1 71. 8 30
P m Thur1Dy'l ~me•
Taxas at Milwaukee
(Only game s.:hedoledl

!!

By BILL MADDEN
UP! Sports Writer
Those heated-up Amencan
League permant races reached
pressure-cooker proportions
Tuesday mghl, culrnmatmg
mth a wild brawl between
divur10n leaders Oakland and
Detroit and fourth-place
Boston mching to w1thin 212
games of the lead m the East
The Athletics mamtamed
their Western DlVlSIOn lead-if
not the~r composure- by
boWictng the Eastern-leading
Tigers, 6-3, but not before both
benches emptied m a wild
round of fisticuffs m the
seventh mnmg
The fracas began when Tiger
pitcher Bill Slayback, who had

already thrown one wild p1tch,
hurled another behmd the head
of the A s' Angel Mangual As
w1rmmg p1tcher Jollll Odom,
who was on second, advanced
to thl!'d and Slayback came m
to cover the plate, Mangual
suddenly ran out to meet him,
began throwmg punches and
then tackled hun
General Free-For-AU
That brought both bencbes
and bullpensontothe held for a
general free.for-all that took
nearly 15 mmutes before order
could be restored The crowd of
30,490 added to the commotion
by showermg paper cups and
dehr1s on the As as they
returned to the1r benches

Elsewhere, the Red Sox
made matters even tighter ln
the East w1th a 1~7 v1ctory
over Kansas City as Baltunore
and New York ]omed the
Tigers m defeat The Or~oles
fell, 2-0, to Califorma while the
Yankees dropped a 5-4 deciSion
to Ch1cago and the White Sox
kept pace mth Oakland in the
West In the other two games,
Cleveland edged Minnesota, 32, and Texas nipped
Milwaukee, 2-1
In National League action,
the New York Mets downed
Houston, 4-2, Cincmnati topped
Montreal, 5-3, Atlanta outslugged Phlladelphta, 11-7,
Ch1cago rupped San D1ego, 4-3,

Phipps Uncertain Starter
HIRAM, Oh10 (UPI ) Cleveland Browns coach Nick
Skor1ch says he has not made
up hur mmd wh'e ther to start
M1ke Ph1pps or veteran B1ll
Nelsen at quarterback 1n
Saturday's exhibition agamst
the Mmnesota VIkings
"I S8ld all along that Nelson
needs three games to get ready for the season and that
means he'll play Saturday, "
Skor1ch S8ld "! don't know
whether he'll start yet We
haven't fully dec1ded that "

International League Standings
By United Press International
W L Pet GB
Charleston
)4 54
578 LouiSville
74 57 565 1'17
69 62 527 6'12
Rochester
Tidewater
68 63 519 7'12
Toledo
66 65 504 91
12
Syracuse
61 70 466 14'h
Richmond
59 12 450 16'12
Peninsula
50 ,78 391 24
Tuesday's Rosults
Charleston 9 Richmond 2 (1st)
Charleston 7 Richmond 1 (2nd)
Loursvllle 9 Syracuse 6
Peninsula 5 Tidewater 1
Rochester 3 Toledo 2 ( 11 Inns)
WREN NAMED

I'HILADELPIDA

(UPI)-

The Pblladelphia PblWe8 have
named Bob Wren, who sent 51
players Into professional ball
cklrlng uuccesaful Z4 years as
lallball coadl at Oblo UnlvtrII~, u 1 IP'Cial alllllgnment
lnllructGr 1JK1 &lt;IOIICh Tuetlday.

Skor~ch

was asked 1f he was
pleased With the progress of
Phipps who has started all
three exhtbltton losses
"He hasn't come aloog as
fast as I'd hoped," satd Skorlch, "but 'then all of his protr
lems have not been hls fault "
Skor~eh S8ld hts mam dlsappomtment so far has been the
Browns rWinmg game - or
lack of 1t
"It's our number one obJec·
ti ve thur year to make us a
contender ," sa1d Skor1ch
"We've had to play the k1ds to
find out if they could help Of
course we've been working
wtth a lot of young llnemen,
too This hampered Phipps
because of the lack of a
balanced attack "

Pittsburgh shaded San
Franc1sco, 1-0, and Los
Angeles topped St Louts, 1.0
Homers by Joe Rud1, Odom
and Mangual proVIded the A's
With the necessary fl!'epower to
deny Mickey Lobch h•s 20th
VIctory Mangual, who was
ejected along wtth Slayback
and Ike Brown, had a three-run
blast m the fifth
Yaz Celebrates
Carl Yastrzemsk1 celebrated
his 33rd birthday by crackmg
his fourth homer of the season
m joining Carlton FISk and
John Kennedy mth two runsbatted-to apmce as the Red Sox
outlasted the Royals Nolan
Ryan 's four-lntter prevented
the slwnpmg Or1oles from
gammg any ground as Bob

Oh ver drove m one Angel run
and scored the other
Dtck Allen's 31st bomer mth
Buddy Bradford aboard m the
fifth hfted the Whtte Sox to a
come-from -behmd trtumph
over the Yankees M1ke An·
drews also drove m two runs as
the Yankees blew a ~ lead
Gaylord Perry chalked up
his 19th victory for Cleveland
w1th the help of defensiVe
replacement Tommy McCraw
McCraw smgled home Buddy
Bell w1th the w1rmmg run after
two were out m the mnth lnmng
In the showdown of cellardwellers, RICh Hand and Casey
Cox combmed on a two-hitter
as Texas squeezed by
Milwaukee

MASON BOWUNG CENTER
MASON, W, VA.

Skor~ch

sa1d he has been
"closmg the gap" m search for
backup men for ruruung backs
Leroy Kelly and Bo Scott
"Ken Brown bas done real
well and so has Bo Cornell,"
said Skor~ch "Billy Lefear has
great ab1lity, but he's so green
and he 's hurt us because of
thlS "
Some of the br~ght spots IIl·
elude llnebacking and the defensive secondary," sa1d Skorlch
"The passmg game lS commg along, too," sa1d Skor1ch
"And we're especially pleased
w1th the way some of the ktds
have progressed Guys like
Bubba Pena, Doug D!eken,
Tom Darden, Lester Sims and
Cliff Brooks "

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���.7- Thf lllily Sentinel, Mid&lt;Ut•puo·r-Pullll',..,Y. 0 ..

TH ANN.IVERSARY SALE

·-The Daily Septlnel,Middlepori·P«neroy, o.,August 23, 19'12

So Hear .T his: .Cost of Living
WASHINGTON (UP!) - The
cost of living rose· 0.4 pel, in
July, its biggesl jump in five
months, the Labor Department
said Tuesday. Sharply higher
fo od prices·, especially for
meat, were blamed.
The departmenl's Bureau of
Labor Statistics (BlS) said
almost two-thirds of the increase in ils Consumer Price
Index (CPI) was caused by a
1.2 pet, jump in the cost of food
in groceries.

in wholesale food prices.
Mea ts, p&lt;&gt;ultry and fish showed
a 2.8 pet. increase.
The over-all increase in July
was exceeded this year only by
a 0.5 pet, jump in February. It
lelr the index 3 pet. above a
year ago.
But the 'BLS said average
weekly earnings of workers
increased more than enough in
July to keep up with the rising
cusr of living, with the purchasing power of their gross
weekly earnings increasing 0.4

· The higher grocery prices pet.
reflected recent sharp upturns
Actual average gross weekly

--------------------------I

1

earnings increased $1.09 in
July t" $136.47. due to a !-cent
increase in hourly earnings
and a 12-minute longer work
week . Aller adjustment for
charges in consumer prices,
real weekly earnings were 0.4
per. above June and 3.5 pet.
ab&lt;&gt;ve a year earlier.
While food prices were
shouting upward, prices for
commodities other than food
remained unchanged in July,
the first lime in six months
there had not been an increase.
N11n!ood commodity prices,
h11wever, normally decline in
July. Prices lor services went
up 0.3 pel., about average for
the past year.

Jumpe~

Prices for fruits and
vegetables went up 0.9 pet. :~st
month . BUt not all food prices
increased. Dairy product
prices went down 0.2 pet. and
prices for cereals and bakery
pr.,dticfs declined 0.1 pet.
Ciothlqg Prices Down
In nonfood items, prices rose

£ur gasoline, houses, used cars,
alcoholic beverages and some
house furnishings such as
carpets, table lamps and
dinnerware.
But while used &lt;:ar prices
were increasing 0.6 pet., new
car · prices declined 0.3 pet.
although this was a smaller
decline than usual in July.
The BLS said price declines

.Reds in
~

resulted from
summer .
clearance sales on furniture
textile ,house furnishings ·and
cluthing. Prices for 111en's and
buys' clothing went down 't 2
pet., women's and girls'
clothing prices 1.1 pet. and
shoes 0.1 pet.
The HlS said about twothirds of the 0.3 pet. increase in
the prices of services in Juiy
was due to higher charges for
most household services,
particularly . insW'ance, mortgage interest, taxes and home
repairs.
There were also higher
prices for rent, medical and
dental services and transportation .

I Washington · l
Ohio Delegation Accorded
l Rep'ort
I

I

I

I

By Clarence

1

'
'

•

•"

"J

•'

Recently, I joined in support
of a bill which would enable the
federal government to donate
surplus federal property of
historical significance to State
and local governments for the
pW'pose of preserving their
traditional value. Passage of
this particular bill was
especially timely in light of the
approaching observance of this
nation's 200th birthday.
Over the .years, the Federal
Government has functioned
through the Interior Departmentand the General Services
Administration (GSA) to
preserve items of historic
significance. Where funds exist
and such national significance
is determined, the Interior
Department establishes,
manages, and preserves
properties on a national basis.
The General Services Administration, for its part, has
exercises authority conferred
upon it by Congress in 1944 to
~ke surplus Federal property
available to State and lor.al
governments for historic
monument purposes where
such properties are deemed to
have more of a regional or
local value rather than
national significance.
Tlle bill states that SW'plus
federal property can qualify as
historic monuments to possibly
'&gt;e operated by state or local
governmentS for revenue producing purposes \p one of
two ways: I) if the property is
associated with some historic
event or person; or 2) if the
properly exhibits an architectural style or type of
construction
that
. is
representative of a specific
period in American history.
The legislation authorizes
GSA, when conveying historic
surplus properly to State and
local
governments,
to
authorize the use of such

~iUer

·

Il

,

properly for revenue
producing
purposes.
Recognizing, however , the
potential for misuse that this
new grant of authority
possesses, the bill included
some necessary safeifuards.
While it is not anticipated
that significant revenues will
be generated on a property in
excess of that needed to

finance restoration, repair,
and related arrangements, any
excess funds must be used by
the grantee only for historic
preservation,
park,
or
recreational purposes, as
approved by the Secretary of
the Interior.
Every deed of conveyance
shall conta in provisions
providing for the reversion of
the property to the Govern·
men t if" any of the safeguards
are violated or if the property
ceases to be used for historic
purposes.

Rare Honor in .Convention

MIAMI BEACH (UPI)-Ohio
received a singular honor at
the Republican National Convention Tuesday- night when
two of eight persons chosen to
formally inform · President
Nixon of his renomination were
from the Buckeye State.
The announcement by per·
manent convention chairman
Gerald R. Ford of Michigan
came after Ohio's delegates
had cast all 56 of their votes for
Nixon.
Appointed by Ford to join in
the traditional task were
Cleveland Mayor Ralph Perk
and Rep. Samuel Devine of
Columbus.
Ohio was the only state to
have more than one representative in the blue-ribbon group.
The vote for the presidential
nomination brought about a
lengthy floor demonstration

joined in by some members of
the Ohio delegation.
Four Backed Rule
· The evening activity followed a session in which the vast
majority of the delegation unsuccessfully supported a move
to give large states more voting power at future conventions.
Only four of the state's 56
votes backed the eventual rule
which places more emphasis
for bonus delegates at the 1976
convention on whether or·not a
state goes for Nixon this fall.
They were former Gov. John
Bricker · of Columbus, Rep.
Donald D. Clancy of Cincinnati, Franklin D. Perry of
Franklin, and Vincent B. linn
of Zanesville.
State GOP Chairman John S.
Andrews, who supported the
amendment that was defeated,

Ground
School
Opened
FBI MAKE ARREST
COLUMBUS (UPI)
Charles G. Wagener, 30, Through Squadron 1207
Columbus, was arrested by
FBI agents at his apartment
here Tuesday on a charge of
impersonating a military
sl!rviceman.
Wagener was accused of
making telephone calls .to servIcemen home on leave and giv·
ing them orders.
MAN FOUND SHOT
COLUMBUS
(UPI)Hilebw-n Martin, 72, Colwnbus, was found shot to death at
his home Tuesday.
Detectives said Martin apparently was shot while sitting
in a chair in the dining room.
No gun was found.
There were no signs of forced
entry, but a portable television
set was missing.

By Rene Broyles
Seventeen members of Sqdn .
1207 of the Gallia County Civil
Air Patrol began ground school
Tuesday evening at the court
house. Tom McCauley, owner
and operator of the Frosty
Freeze, is instructor.
McCauley, a licensed
commercial and multi-engine
pilot, is certified to teach
ground instruction , flying by
instruments, and has logged
1300 hours as flight instructor
with 4000 hours actual night
time.
Cadets Mike Dayton, Perry
Neal, Tim and Patty Fife,
Ronnie
Wilkins ,
Jim
Musgrove, Ray Weiher, and

Irregularities Reported in
Handling $500,000 by GOP
WASHINGTON (UP!) - The ail the funds it received after
General Accounting Office April 7, the effective date of a
(GAO) has found violations in new campaign fund reporting
the handling of nearly $500,000 law.
by President Nixon's reAccording to the sources, the
election committee, the $500,000 questioned by the
Washingt on Post reported investigators represents about
Tuesday .
$200,000 in unreported conQuoting " several reliable '-tributions, and "another couple
sources" the newspaper said hundred thousand ddilars in
GAO investigators found what unreported expenditures."
they described as a $100,000
Added to the total was the
" campaign security fund ." StOO ,OOO campaign security
From th is fund, it said, $25,000 fund , and "some errors, apwas deposited in a bank ac- parently technical, in recount of one of the suspects in porting a $500,000 itemithe alleged bugging and break- zation, and an undisin at the Democratic National closed amount, probably
Committee .
small, of loose cash at ·the
The Post also said the in- Nixon committee," the newsvestigators cited the Com- · paper.
mittee lor R~lection of the
The newspaper quoted other
President for failure to report

Randy Friend, with senior
members Gary Wallace, John
and Sue Dillon, Verna Evans,
Jim and Donna Shato, Louise
Fife, Ray Friend and Rene
Broyles attended. ·
Basic principals of flight,
requirements of students and
FAA regulations were touched
upon with the instructor explaining the topics to be
covered throughout the
remainder of the CoW'se .
Residents of Meigs County
are welcome to attend these
meetings as that area is included in the . Gallia County
Sand R operations if needed.
Persons must be at least IJ
years of age to join the Civil Air
Patrol but must he 16 years of
age to obtain a student pilot
license.
The local unit meets each
Monday evening at 7 p. m. for
regular sessions with ground
school for pilot instruction each
Tuesday at 7 p. m. for a period
of 10 weeks only. All members
are requested to attend these
meetings as activities are in
the planning stage for the fail
and win!Alr seasons.
Applications are still
available and can be had by
calling Information Officer
Rene Broyles at 446-0515 or
Commander Ray Friend at 4464047 .

Republican so urces as
claiming that if there were any
irregularities they would turn
out to be technical, or simple
administrative oversights.
According to the sources, the
Post said the investigators
found evidence of several
"slush funds, " special accounts which did not appear to
be included in the regular
bookkeeping .
One of these was the fund of
ab out $100,000 that was
designated for security pW'poses. A $25,000 campaign
check deposited in a Miami
bank account of one of the
persons arrested in theN
Democratic offices June 17 was
taken from this fund , the newspaper said.

Strikes

said it would have given the
state a possible 107 delegates In
the next convention, rather
than 99 estimated under the
adopted formula.
Clancy said he was particularly concerned with the
amendment because it, would
divide up 400 delegates among
the states on the basis of their
Republican presidential vote,
not whether or not the state
was in the GOP column.
No Bitterness
"! think that the states that
carry ... should be rewarded,"
he said.
One of those who voted for
the amendment was Sen. Robert Taft Jr.
"Some of the larger states
are not getting the representation we should," Taft said.
He said, however, there was
no bitterness in the dispute.
The delegation, like the others at the convention, was expected to Sp&lt;end most of Ieday
relaxing before the final
session tonight when Vice
President Spiro T. Agnew will
be renominated and President
Nixon will deliver his acceptance speech.

~~·
.

-~

.

2nd Bi'g Week .of Values ! !

.

.

.

.

SAIGON (UP! )-Communllt
troops slipped behind new
defense lines around lla Nang
-today and shelled South Vietnam's second largest city frmn
two miles away, the South
VIetnamese
command
reporte&lt;l.
Government trO()ps trying 10
protect Da Nang, home of 5,000
American airmen, kll)ed 101
Communist soldiers 25 miles
south of the city, spokesmen
said. Tbe battles were fought In
an area where North Vietna·
mese long ...ange artiUery and
armor had been spotted and
bombed by allied aircraft last
weekend.
The Saigon · command said
Communist soldiers cut behind
outer defense lines to within
two miles of lla Nang-tbe
range for mortar fire-and .hit
the city with 17 rockets and
mortars before . dawn Ieday.
But UPI reporter Ed Bassett
in Da Nang said no mortars
and only six rockets hit the city
of 300,000 persons, wounding II
civilians. The North Vietnamese rockets have a range
of about six and one-half miles.
A 3,000-man government
operation designed to reoccupy
the lost positions at the district
capital of Que Son and Ross
base has moved to within two
miles of the Communist forces,
spokesmen said.
The force killed 94 Communists Tuesday in heavy fighting
51!. miles n!H'theast of Que Son
near key Highway I,
spokesmen said. · One South
Vietnamese soldier was killed.
U.S. B52s Tuesday night and
early Ieday supported the force
with three bombing waves, the
U.S. command said. Another 13
waves struck targets In Quang
Tri province.
In the Central Highlands, a
passenger bus traveling a
secondary highway hit a mine,
killing 21 civilians.
North Vietnamese troops in
their 114th day of occupying

·· u
.·~..~. If Children Are
.

Tall--Happiness!
By BETTY CANARY
Child health specialists investigating for Britain's Royal
Society of Medicine say the backgrounds of abnormally
small boys and girls show an unhappy homelife can stunt
a child's growth.
•
I clipped this news item and posted it on my kitchen
bulletin board for the sole purpose of proving to my children that. because they are tall, they are happy, happy,
happy .
My 16-year-old sori, who is, at the moment, six feet,
five inches tall. must be almost deliriously happy.
Or, at least that's what I told him this morning when ,
he was leaning against the broom closet muttering, " Why
does everybody hate me?"
"Maybe they hate you because you don 't realize how
HAPPY you are! " I replied. (After atl, one cannot refute
scientific evidence.)
He didn't answer , except for a cry of pain . Pain brought
about by striking his head against a cupboard door as he
left the room . (Before reading the British report, I would
have thought , if only he were shorter.)
'•
I am tremendously interested in the report from Great
Britain because I have often wondered why my children
were ta ller than any of their ancestors. I have heretofore
attributed their stature, along with their large feet, to an
abundance of vitamins, oranges, well-fitted oxfords, fresh
air and enough milk to float two aircraft carriers.
Now, to my delight, I discover it is because I have
given them such a happy childhood. Evidence in the
report shows that emotional upsets cause children to
slop growing.
. Obviously, that evidence works the opposite way. Obvwusly , my calm disposition and equanimity has contributed to their height.
Now that I have. this puzzle figured out, I am left with
only one question. Why do you think I'm an inch shorter
than I was at the age of 21?

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Quang Tri Tuesday launched a
new attack on 2,000 govern·
ment marines trying to
recapture the northerrunost
province capital, spokesmen
said, but the marines beat back
the assault, killing 79 North
Vietnamese at a C06t of eight
marines killed and 73 wounded.
In Cambodia, a Communist
forces staged predawn attacks
today on the market town of
Angtassom, 40 miles south of
Phnom Penh, and Cheang
Luong, 73 miles northwest of
the capital, the command
reported. Both towns are on
key supply routes for Phnom
Penh.

ROADS UNSAFE
.
COLUMBUS (UPI)-The
Ohio Contractors Association
says the 42 persons killed In
traffic accidents the weekend
ending Aug. 13 emphasized
"the urgent need" Ill improve
certain state highways and
county roads.
Association Executive
Director Karl Rothennund Jr.
said only two of the traffic
deaths occw-red on interstate
highways and no one died on
the Ohio Turnpike that
weekend.
"Fatalities were more than
41!. times higher per vehicular
mile traveled on highways other than interstate and the tumpike," he said. "This indicates
that there is a critical need for
improvement of existing unsafe federal, state and county
roads and city streets."
Rothennund also said enactment of a twCH:ent incre~se on
motor vehicle fuel "would permit a continuing highway
struction program that wo
upgrade the existing unsti ·

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announcing the engagement and forthcoming marriage of
their daughter, Freda Lee, to Rev. David Andrew Cl!f{man,
son of Rev. and Mrs. W. E. CW'fman, Rt. 1, Cbeshlre. Wedding plans are incomplete.

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'

SUBSIDIES REPORTED
COLUMBUS (UPI) - State
Audililr Joseph T. Ferguson
says Ohio sent subsidies totaling some $24 million to colleges, universities aod technicalinstitutesin July, about $4.5
million more than in July 1971.
Fourteen four-y.ear. colleges
and universities were given
$19,632,168, 17 technical insti·
lutes got $775,750, !OW' commu- roads."
nity colleges received $1,3Zl,850, and three hospitals af- YOUfH FOUND HANGED
filiated with colleges or
CINCINNATI (UP!) -A 12universities received year-()Jd Walnut Hills boy was
$1,284,167.
found hanged In a bathroom at
his home, an apparent suicide,
FCC AcnON
police reported.
WASHINGTON (UP!)- The
The body of James E. Glass
Federal Communications was found Monday night by his
Cotrunission said today it had mother. The boy apparently
received an application for the had used his belt as a noose.
assignment of the license lor
Mrs. Barbara Glass said her
radio stations WTOO and son had appeared elated elirll·
WOGM from WOHP, Inc ., er in the evening. She said he
Bellefontaine, Ohio, to the had won a tennis tournament
Triplett Broadcasting Inc.
that day.

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BALLARD or PILLSBURY·

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1

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SAIGON (UPI ) - U.S. jets
and B52 bombers flew the
highest nwnber of strikes in
three months Tuesday, most of
them aimed at Communist
forces threa tening government
positions in northern South
Vietnam, the U. S. command
said today.
U. S. officers said 84 B52s,
joined by 375 fighter- bombers,
dumped 2,000 tons of explosives
on suspected Communist troop
positions and supplies. They
said the heaviest strikes were
in the upper three provinces of
South Vietnam.
Spokesmen . said the raids
were the heaviest by U. S:
fighter bombers in the country
since May 29, when U. S. jets
flew 384 missions.
At the same time , the
nwnber of Communist attacks
dropped from 78 Monday to 69
Tuesday, spokesmen said .
Included in Tuesday's attacks
were 51 rocket, mortar and
artillery barrages.

Behind
.
DaNang

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�.7- Thf lllily Sentinel, Mid&lt;Ut•puo·r-Pullll',..,Y. 0 ..

TH ANN.IVERSARY SALE

·-The Daily Septlnel,Middlepori·P«neroy, o.,August 23, 19'12

So Hear .T his: .Cost of Living
WASHINGTON (UP!) - The
cost of living rose· 0.4 pel, in
July, its biggesl jump in five
months, the Labor Department
said Tuesday. Sharply higher
fo od prices·, especially for
meat, were blamed.
The departmenl's Bureau of
Labor Statistics (BlS) said
almost two-thirds of the increase in ils Consumer Price
Index (CPI) was caused by a
1.2 pet, jump in the cost of food
in groceries.

in wholesale food prices.
Mea ts, p&lt;&gt;ultry and fish showed
a 2.8 pet. increase.
The over-all increase in July
was exceeded this year only by
a 0.5 pet, jump in February. It
lelr the index 3 pet. above a
year ago.
But the 'BLS said average
weekly earnings of workers
increased more than enough in
July to keep up with the rising
cusr of living, with the purchasing power of their gross
weekly earnings increasing 0.4

· The higher grocery prices pet.
reflected recent sharp upturns
Actual average gross weekly

--------------------------I

1

earnings increased $1.09 in
July t" $136.47. due to a !-cent
increase in hourly earnings
and a 12-minute longer work
week . Aller adjustment for
charges in consumer prices,
real weekly earnings were 0.4
per. above June and 3.5 pet.
ab&lt;&gt;ve a year earlier.
While food prices were
shouting upward, prices for
commodities other than food
remained unchanged in July,
the first lime in six months
there had not been an increase.
N11n!ood commodity prices,
h11wever, normally decline in
July. Prices lor services went
up 0.3 pel., about average for
the past year.

Jumpe~

Prices for fruits and
vegetables went up 0.9 pet. :~st
month . BUt not all food prices
increased. Dairy product
prices went down 0.2 pet. and
prices for cereals and bakery
pr.,dticfs declined 0.1 pet.
Ciothlqg Prices Down
In nonfood items, prices rose

£ur gasoline, houses, used cars,
alcoholic beverages and some
house furnishings such as
carpets, table lamps and
dinnerware.
But while used &lt;:ar prices
were increasing 0.6 pet., new
car · prices declined 0.3 pet.
although this was a smaller
decline than usual in July.
The BLS said price declines

.Reds in
~

resulted from
summer .
clearance sales on furniture
textile ,house furnishings ·and
cluthing. Prices for 111en's and
buys' clothing went down 't 2
pet., women's and girls'
clothing prices 1.1 pet. and
shoes 0.1 pet.
The HlS said about twothirds of the 0.3 pet. increase in
the prices of services in Juiy
was due to higher charges for
most household services,
particularly . insW'ance, mortgage interest, taxes and home
repairs.
There were also higher
prices for rent, medical and
dental services and transportation .

I Washington · l
Ohio Delegation Accorded
l Rep'ort
I

I

I

I

By Clarence

1

'
'

•

•"

"J

•'

Recently, I joined in support
of a bill which would enable the
federal government to donate
surplus federal property of
historical significance to State
and local governments for the
pW'pose of preserving their
traditional value. Passage of
this particular bill was
especially timely in light of the
approaching observance of this
nation's 200th birthday.
Over the .years, the Federal
Government has functioned
through the Interior Departmentand the General Services
Administration (GSA) to
preserve items of historic
significance. Where funds exist
and such national significance
is determined, the Interior
Department establishes,
manages, and preserves
properties on a national basis.
The General Services Administration, for its part, has
exercises authority conferred
upon it by Congress in 1944 to
~ke surplus Federal property
available to State and lor.al
governments for historic
monument purposes where
such properties are deemed to
have more of a regional or
local value rather than
national significance.
Tlle bill states that SW'plus
federal property can qualify as
historic monuments to possibly
'&gt;e operated by state or local
governmentS for revenue producing purposes \p one of
two ways: I) if the property is
associated with some historic
event or person; or 2) if the
properly exhibits an architectural style or type of
construction
that
. is
representative of a specific
period in American history.
The legislation authorizes
GSA, when conveying historic
surplus properly to State and
local
governments,
to
authorize the use of such

~iUer

·

Il

,

properly for revenue
producing
purposes.
Recognizing, however , the
potential for misuse that this
new grant of authority
possesses, the bill included
some necessary safeifuards.
While it is not anticipated
that significant revenues will
be generated on a property in
excess of that needed to

finance restoration, repair,
and related arrangements, any
excess funds must be used by
the grantee only for historic
preservation,
park,
or
recreational purposes, as
approved by the Secretary of
the Interior.
Every deed of conveyance
shall conta in provisions
providing for the reversion of
the property to the Govern·
men t if" any of the safeguards
are violated or if the property
ceases to be used for historic
purposes.

Rare Honor in .Convention

MIAMI BEACH (UPI)-Ohio
received a singular honor at
the Republican National Convention Tuesday- night when
two of eight persons chosen to
formally inform · President
Nixon of his renomination were
from the Buckeye State.
The announcement by per·
manent convention chairman
Gerald R. Ford of Michigan
came after Ohio's delegates
had cast all 56 of their votes for
Nixon.
Appointed by Ford to join in
the traditional task were
Cleveland Mayor Ralph Perk
and Rep. Samuel Devine of
Columbus.
Ohio was the only state to
have more than one representative in the blue-ribbon group.
The vote for the presidential
nomination brought about a
lengthy floor demonstration

joined in by some members of
the Ohio delegation.
Four Backed Rule
· The evening activity followed a session in which the vast
majority of the delegation unsuccessfully supported a move
to give large states more voting power at future conventions.
Only four of the state's 56
votes backed the eventual rule
which places more emphasis
for bonus delegates at the 1976
convention on whether or·not a
state goes for Nixon this fall.
They were former Gov. John
Bricker · of Columbus, Rep.
Donald D. Clancy of Cincinnati, Franklin D. Perry of
Franklin, and Vincent B. linn
of Zanesville.
State GOP Chairman John S.
Andrews, who supported the
amendment that was defeated,

Ground
School
Opened
FBI MAKE ARREST
COLUMBUS (UPI)
Charles G. Wagener, 30, Through Squadron 1207
Columbus, was arrested by
FBI agents at his apartment
here Tuesday on a charge of
impersonating a military
sl!rviceman.
Wagener was accused of
making telephone calls .to servIcemen home on leave and giv·
ing them orders.
MAN FOUND SHOT
COLUMBUS
(UPI)Hilebw-n Martin, 72, Colwnbus, was found shot to death at
his home Tuesday.
Detectives said Martin apparently was shot while sitting
in a chair in the dining room.
No gun was found.
There were no signs of forced
entry, but a portable television
set was missing.

By Rene Broyles
Seventeen members of Sqdn .
1207 of the Gallia County Civil
Air Patrol began ground school
Tuesday evening at the court
house. Tom McCauley, owner
and operator of the Frosty
Freeze, is instructor.
McCauley, a licensed
commercial and multi-engine
pilot, is certified to teach
ground instruction , flying by
instruments, and has logged
1300 hours as flight instructor
with 4000 hours actual night
time.
Cadets Mike Dayton, Perry
Neal, Tim and Patty Fife,
Ronnie
Wilkins ,
Jim
Musgrove, Ray Weiher, and

Irregularities Reported in
Handling $500,000 by GOP
WASHINGTON (UP!) - The ail the funds it received after
General Accounting Office April 7, the effective date of a
(GAO) has found violations in new campaign fund reporting
the handling of nearly $500,000 law.
by President Nixon's reAccording to the sources, the
election committee, the $500,000 questioned by the
Washingt on Post reported investigators represents about
Tuesday .
$200,000 in unreported conQuoting " several reliable '-tributions, and "another couple
sources" the newspaper said hundred thousand ddilars in
GAO investigators found what unreported expenditures."
they described as a $100,000
Added to the total was the
" campaign security fund ." StOO ,OOO campaign security
From th is fund, it said, $25,000 fund , and "some errors, apwas deposited in a bank ac- parently technical, in recount of one of the suspects in porting a $500,000 itemithe alleged bugging and break- zation, and an undisin at the Democratic National closed amount, probably
Committee .
small, of loose cash at ·the
The Post also said the in- Nixon committee," the newsvestigators cited the Com- · paper.
mittee lor R~lection of the
The newspaper quoted other
President for failure to report

Randy Friend, with senior
members Gary Wallace, John
and Sue Dillon, Verna Evans,
Jim and Donna Shato, Louise
Fife, Ray Friend and Rene
Broyles attended. ·
Basic principals of flight,
requirements of students and
FAA regulations were touched
upon with the instructor explaining the topics to be
covered throughout the
remainder of the CoW'se .
Residents of Meigs County
are welcome to attend these
meetings as that area is included in the . Gallia County
Sand R operations if needed.
Persons must be at least IJ
years of age to join the Civil Air
Patrol but must he 16 years of
age to obtain a student pilot
license.
The local unit meets each
Monday evening at 7 p. m. for
regular sessions with ground
school for pilot instruction each
Tuesday at 7 p. m. for a period
of 10 weeks only. All members
are requested to attend these
meetings as activities are in
the planning stage for the fail
and win!Alr seasons.
Applications are still
available and can be had by
calling Information Officer
Rene Broyles at 446-0515 or
Commander Ray Friend at 4464047 .

Republican so urces as
claiming that if there were any
irregularities they would turn
out to be technical, or simple
administrative oversights.
According to the sources, the
Post said the investigators
found evidence of several
"slush funds, " special accounts which did not appear to
be included in the regular
bookkeeping .
One of these was the fund of
ab out $100,000 that was
designated for security pW'poses. A $25,000 campaign
check deposited in a Miami
bank account of one of the
persons arrested in theN
Democratic offices June 17 was
taken from this fund , the newspaper said.

Strikes

said it would have given the
state a possible 107 delegates In
the next convention, rather
than 99 estimated under the
adopted formula.
Clancy said he was particularly concerned with the
amendment because it, would
divide up 400 delegates among
the states on the basis of their
Republican presidential vote,
not whether or not the state
was in the GOP column.
No Bitterness
"! think that the states that
carry ... should be rewarded,"
he said.
One of those who voted for
the amendment was Sen. Robert Taft Jr.
"Some of the larger states
are not getting the representation we should," Taft said.
He said, however, there was
no bitterness in the dispute.
The delegation, like the others at the convention, was expected to Sp&lt;end most of Ieday
relaxing before the final
session tonight when Vice
President Spiro T. Agnew will
be renominated and President
Nixon will deliver his acceptance speech.

~~·
.

-~

.

2nd Bi'g Week .of Values ! !

.

.

.

.

SAIGON (UP! )-Communllt
troops slipped behind new
defense lines around lla Nang
-today and shelled South Vietnam's second largest city frmn
two miles away, the South
VIetnamese
command
reporte&lt;l.
Government trO()ps trying 10
protect Da Nang, home of 5,000
American airmen, kll)ed 101
Communist soldiers 25 miles
south of the city, spokesmen
said. Tbe battles were fought In
an area where North Vietna·
mese long ...ange artiUery and
armor had been spotted and
bombed by allied aircraft last
weekend.
The Saigon · command said
Communist soldiers cut behind
outer defense lines to within
two miles of lla Nang-tbe
range for mortar fire-and .hit
the city with 17 rockets and
mortars before . dawn Ieday.
But UPI reporter Ed Bassett
in Da Nang said no mortars
and only six rockets hit the city
of 300,000 persons, wounding II
civilians. The North Vietnamese rockets have a range
of about six and one-half miles.
A 3,000-man government
operation designed to reoccupy
the lost positions at the district
capital of Que Son and Ross
base has moved to within two
miles of the Communist forces,
spokesmen said.
The force killed 94 Communists Tuesday in heavy fighting
51!. miles n!H'theast of Que Son
near key Highway I,
spokesmen said. · One South
Vietnamese soldier was killed.
U.S. B52s Tuesday night and
early Ieday supported the force
with three bombing waves, the
U.S. command said. Another 13
waves struck targets In Quang
Tri province.
In the Central Highlands, a
passenger bus traveling a
secondary highway hit a mine,
killing 21 civilians.
North Vietnamese troops in
their 114th day of occupying

·· u
.·~..~. If Children Are
.

Tall--Happiness!
By BETTY CANARY
Child health specialists investigating for Britain's Royal
Society of Medicine say the backgrounds of abnormally
small boys and girls show an unhappy homelife can stunt
a child's growth.
•
I clipped this news item and posted it on my kitchen
bulletin board for the sole purpose of proving to my children that. because they are tall, they are happy, happy,
happy .
My 16-year-old sori, who is, at the moment, six feet,
five inches tall. must be almost deliriously happy.
Or, at least that's what I told him this morning when ,
he was leaning against the broom closet muttering, " Why
does everybody hate me?"
"Maybe they hate you because you don 't realize how
HAPPY you are! " I replied. (After atl, one cannot refute
scientific evidence.)
He didn't answer , except for a cry of pain . Pain brought
about by striking his head against a cupboard door as he
left the room . (Before reading the British report, I would
have thought , if only he were shorter.)
'•
I am tremendously interested in the report from Great
Britain because I have often wondered why my children
were ta ller than any of their ancestors. I have heretofore
attributed their stature, along with their large feet, to an
abundance of vitamins, oranges, well-fitted oxfords, fresh
air and enough milk to float two aircraft carriers.
Now, to my delight, I discover it is because I have
given them such a happy childhood. Evidence in the
report shows that emotional upsets cause children to
slop growing.
. Obviously, that evidence works the opposite way. Obvwusly , my calm disposition and equanimity has contributed to their height.
Now that I have. this puzzle figured out, I am left with
only one question. Why do you think I'm an inch shorter
than I was at the age of 21?

8-Track Tape Player

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Quang Tri Tuesday launched a
new attack on 2,000 govern·
ment marines trying to
recapture the northerrunost
province capital, spokesmen
said, but the marines beat back
the assault, killing 79 North
Vietnamese at a C06t of eight
marines killed and 73 wounded.
In Cambodia, a Communist
forces staged predawn attacks
today on the market town of
Angtassom, 40 miles south of
Phnom Penh, and Cheang
Luong, 73 miles northwest of
the capital, the command
reported. Both towns are on
key supply routes for Phnom
Penh.

ROADS UNSAFE
.
COLUMBUS (UPI)-The
Ohio Contractors Association
says the 42 persons killed In
traffic accidents the weekend
ending Aug. 13 emphasized
"the urgent need" Ill improve
certain state highways and
county roads.
Association Executive
Director Karl Rothennund Jr.
said only two of the traffic
deaths occw-red on interstate
highways and no one died on
the Ohio Turnpike that
weekend.
"Fatalities were more than
41!. times higher per vehicular
mile traveled on highways other than interstate and the tumpike," he said. "This indicates
that there is a critical need for
improvement of existing unsafe federal, state and county
roads and city streets."
Rothennund also said enactment of a twCH:ent incre~se on
motor vehicle fuel "would permit a continuing highway
struction program that wo
upgrade the existing unsti ·

WIENERS'
20 count
11/2 lb. pkg.

99e

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FRYERS
3 Breast Portions
3 Leg Portions
3 Wings
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lb.

MR. AND MRS. JOHN CANTER, Rt. 4, Jackson, are
announcing the engagement and forthcoming marriage of
their daughter, Freda Lee, to Rev. David Andrew Cl!f{man,
son of Rev. and Mrs. W. E. CW'fman, Rt. 1, Cbeshlre. Wedding plans are incomplete.

HYGRADE ALL MEAT

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lb.

OUR OWN IGA

MILK

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'

SUBSIDIES REPORTED
COLUMBUS (UPI) - State
Audililr Joseph T. Ferguson
says Ohio sent subsidies totaling some $24 million to colleges, universities aod technicalinstitutesin July, about $4.5
million more than in July 1971.
Fourteen four-y.ear. colleges
and universities were given
$19,632,168, 17 technical insti·
lutes got $775,750, !OW' commu- roads."
nity colleges received $1,3Zl,850, and three hospitals af- YOUfH FOUND HANGED
filiated with colleges or
CINCINNATI (UP!) -A 12universities received year-()Jd Walnut Hills boy was
$1,284,167.
found hanged In a bathroom at
his home, an apparent suicide,
FCC AcnON
police reported.
WASHINGTON (UP!)- The
The body of James E. Glass
Federal Communications was found Monday night by his
Cotrunission said today it had mother. The boy apparently
received an application for the had used his belt as a noose.
assignment of the license lor
Mrs. Barbara Glass said her
radio stations WTOO and son had appeared elated elirll·
WOGM from WOHP, Inc ., er in the evening. She said he
Bellefontaine, Ohio, to the had won a tennis tournament
Triplett Broadcasting Inc.
that day.

9e

lb.

---.DOMINO PURE CANE

!

SUGAR
lb. bag

ROOFING SHINGLES

57e

1fz gal.

$

crtns.

26

79e

DOG FOOD
/z CASE
24 CANS
1

oz.

box
LIMIT 2

1.79

LESS THAN 24 CANS-9' CAN

KRAFT'S MIRACLE
.

LUNCHEON MEAT

BALLARD or PILLSBURY·

MARGARI·NE

SPAM

BISCUITS

'

&amp;-STICK

12 oz.

l·LB. PKG.

can

7e

8 oz. can
ONLY

SWEEPSTAKES

BOOTH'S OCEAN

CALIFORNIA

TV DINNERS

MACKEREL

PERCH FILLETS

Oranges or Lemons

15 oz.

l-Ib.

can.

pkg.

•

J0-80 BRAND

BANQUET BRAND
each
only

Price Smash!

lb.

SAVE 71 ~ FAIRMONT 2%

Braunschweiger ·

RADIOS

SWIFT'S GOLD CREST
SELF-BASTING

I

MAPLE LAWN
2~
MEDIUM EGGS DOZEN . . . WITH

69e

9e

doz.

Check This Lower Price!
Barrett

LEAD PENCILS

Self-5eal

240 wt.
Black &amp; While

each

Per
Square

l ·o••

School Scissors

. Cash &amp; Carry

Sale Ends Sat., Aug. 26
At 12 Noon

1

. ----------------~--.----~

Pickup Truck, Custom Cab, One Owner, New

REGISTER FREE!

8-Track Tape Player

SPECIAL - SPECIAL

1971 DODGE 1h Ton

SEE COUPON IN ·
THIS NEWSPAPER

4487-620

ST.
PRIZE

Styleboard Sale!

Gold
Gold
Gold
GOld

lace-White
.. .
Lace-White
lace-Blue
Lace-Avocado

each

THEME BOOKS

NO. 1 QUALITY .

7.95

Reg. . 98~

4X8 SHEET

MATERIALS CO. .

------

ANTI-FREEZE
~

1

NOTEBOOK

With Coolant
Anti-leak

Sheets

9e

99e gal.

QUAKER STATE

MOTOR OIL
SUPER·BLEND
LIMIT 6 QUARTS

LANTERN AND STOVE

FILLER PAPER
300

•

A.TJ. AUTOMATIC TRANSMISSION

FUEL
PENN
CAMP

7eqr.

FLUID

77e

gal.

GAL --

~

I

HOG'G&amp;ZUSPAN .
773-5554

each

PERMANENT

BIC PENS

Pastel Green

urneroUS

SAIGON (UPI ) - U.S. jets
and B52 bombers flew the
highest nwnber of strikes in
three months Tuesday, most of
them aimed at Communist
forces threa tening government
positions in northern South
Vietnam, the U. S. command
said today.
U. S. officers said 84 B52s,
joined by 375 fighter- bombers,
dumped 2,000 tons of explosives
on suspected Communist troop
positions and supplies. They
said the heaviest strikes were
in the upper three provinces of
South Vietnam.
Spokesmen . said the raids
were the heaviest by U. S:
fighter bombers in the country
since May 29, when U. S. jets
flew 384 missions.
At the same time , the
nwnber of Communist attacks
dropped from 78 Monday to 69
Tuesday, spokesmen said .
Included in Tuesday's attacks
were 51 rocket, mortar and
artillery barrages.

Behind
.
DaNang

BETTY CANARY

~

'"'P"' :!;!.19'12

MASON, W. Vl

.

. 5 Subjects

CRAYONS
64
Count

,,

MAIL BOXES
IN COLORS

33
EACH

M&amp;R .LOW, LOW PRICE

PAINT THINNER
GAL

e

"

�a- 'lbe Dally Sentinel, MldcDeport-Pcmeroy, 0., August 23, 1972

..

FASHION

POLLY'S POINTERS
Two Ways to Shop.

B&amp;PW Club$ Dined .

Pants Coming Back for the Fall

With Toddlers in Tow

.

Members of the . Gallipolis nurses, Holier Medical Center,
Business and Professional thanking . the club · for the
Women's Club were guests scholurshtp for Debbie Wood
Monday eve/ling when ' the ' and reporting on her p~ogress ..
Middleport B&amp;PW dilled at the A thank you note · was read
home of Mr. aqd Mrs. John from Betty Conkle .
·
Patk St.
remembrances·;1n recetve~•
Werner,
DurilUl the business meeting during a recen 1 1 ess. . . .
presided over by Mrs. Werner,
Madge Neal of the Galltpoh~
recognition was given three club th~nked Mtddleport Ciu~
members of tbe Gallipolis club for thetr mvi~tJOr. Meetmg
Lola Mae Suiter, EsU: opened with club collect and
McKnight and Edith Hut- closed wtth prayer. Ga"_les
sinpiller who assisted in were played, and the_ traveJt~g
organizing the Middleport club prize donated by Rll&lt;! LeWIS
in 1946 Recognition was also· was awarded Grace Pratt.
given ihree charter members Mrs. Lewil! was chatrman of
of the Middleport Club, the hostess commtttee. . .
F:ieddie Houdashelt, Edith . Attending fro.m GallipQhs
Forrest ·and Pearl Reynolds. were Esta McKmght, Flore~ce
Fairie Kennedy received a gift Willis, Joan Wood, Ehse
in recognition of her twenty- Kimball, Lucy Earwood, Mary
five years of service.
Jane Neal, Bermce McMahon.'
A letter was read from Isabelle Btas, Edtth Hut,
Bernice Skehan, ·director of sinpillar, . Lola Mae Sutter,
Thelma Neal, FlosSie Trout,
Marianne Campbell, Betty
Betz, Grace 'tabor and Madge
Neal.
Steve Place, nephew of
Freddie Houdasheit, was also a ·
guest.

.

By POLLY CRAMER

f0:

DEAR POLLY-! have an answer for Mrs. C. W. who
has trouble shopping with a baby and a · toddler. My
baby's stroller has a wire basket on the back $0 I strall
the baby in his carrier and put the_carrier in t~e ba_s k~t.
The wire piece that makes the earner stand up JUSt ftts m
the basket so baby cannot fall. My toddler ts put m the
seat of th~ stroller so I have them both in the one.ROSALYN

-

Polly's .Problem

----11!

DEAR POLLY- How dOfS one get perspira.tion·
odor out of foam rubber !lillows and a mattress?
My boys perspire so during' the summer and these ,
pillows cannot be washed. Does anyone have a soi: J
tion for my problem?- JUNE

Lm--lllii·i®; _ _ _

.

DEAR POLLY-I can sympathize with Mrs. C. W. who
finds shopping with a baby
and a toddler a real problem as I have a six-monthold baby and a 4-year-old.
I have ·a heavy fabric back
carrier that can be worn
either in the front or the
back. J strap baby on in
the front and she cuddles
·up for a nap and my hands
are left free to m@nage the
other child and shop. MRS. M. V. S.

DEAR POLLY-My Pet Peeve is with all those couyons
that come in the mail. How much better it would be I the
companies '!"Ould spend that money ll!lducing the price of
the products, even if it was only a cent or two. Also, those
coupons that are stuck all through the magazines are a
nuisance, so please let us have some respite from coupons
and give us a reduction in prices instead.-INDA

The 25th wedding anniversary of Mr. and Mrs.
Herman Grate was observed
Aug. 20 when a surprise party
was given by Mr. and Mrs.
John Grate of New Haven.
Ice cream and cake were
served to ' Mr. and Mrs. Otis
Hesson , New Haven ; Mr. and
Mrs. George Grate and family,
Mrs . Bonnie Nicholson, Vicki
Grate and Don Hysell.

Quilting plus ribiess corduroy plus jeans plus the layered look and you hove a quartet of the important
locks of the &gt;eoson . Quilted ribless jeans (left) ore by Toilfeot.hers and are comp lemented by a sunny yellow
shirt, shrink sweater, jaunty cop and soft suede moccas1ns. Bodysuit .topped by knit pullover topped by
happy face (right ) from Seaton Hall 's what style 1s all about.

(NEWSPAPER ENTERPRISE ASSN.)

You will receive a dollar If Polly uses your favorite
bomemaldDg Idea, Pel Peeve, Polly's Problem or solution
to a problem. Write Polly In care of this newspaper.

Facing Money Troubles
'

RIO GRANDE
An
estimated 200 of America's
independent colleges may not
survive aqother year, according to Father Paul
Reinert, president of St. Louis
University and chairman of the
Association of American
Father Reinert has authored
"To TW"n The Tide," which
studies !he economic dangers
lacing public and private
sectors of higher education.
The book incorporated the
findings of "Project Search," a
nationwide survey effort.
Father Reinert declared in
his book that the tide may still
be burned against the immediate threat of financial
disaster. However, it will only
be possible if immediate
cooperative action is taken by ·
educators , businessmen,
government officials and other
responsible leaders.
Father Reinert's findings
have been accepted within the
education community according to Dr . Thomas
Langevin, president of Capital
University and of the
Association of Independent
Colleges an:! Universities of
Ohio (AICUO). He said
educators in many disciplines
are in accord with its merits.
The study was conducted

GRANDSON HONORED
Mr. and Mrs. Eddie Kitchen
Sr. hosted a birthday party for
their grandson, J. R., at the
home of Mr. and Mrs. Eddie
Kitchen, Jr ., Ash Street,
Middleport, on Monday, Aug.
21. J . R. is three years old.
Decorated ice cream cone cup
cakes and ice cream were
served to Luke, Chris, Tracy
and Kellee Burdette. Mrs.
Cherole
Burdette,
Jo
McKinney,Joni Murray, Robin
and Julie Kitchen. Sending
gifts were Mrs . Ruth Gosney
and Mrs. Jennie Hansher .

MAN DROWNS

BATAVIA, Ohio (UPI)Rodney Stidham, 22, of
Reading, drowned Tuesday in
Hidden Valley Lake, located in
Stonelick Township in Clermont County.

new
arrival
I

''I

/I
;

SHOE

r·
' -

'

l

I

I .

)

"!

Pomeroy

·~

.

:.

Fam01u Stride Rile1, best known to generations of concernt'd
mother s for qu ~ll tv . t rlllbmtnsl'llp , ancllautten t it In line sho-es
ffom Inf ant to pr,e.feoen, ore equallr tamov~ lor lhtlr t&amp;! hiOMble
QOOd look !. Our ! I.Jit ollrtlnt'd e ~perl~ will Ill yollr ch,lc:J 10 the
llntsl pie~ shoe1, l('hoollhl'lel , party 1hoe1, rl/ilo lurn-to wtl~
1h~ bv Strldl! R:lle. mact. with t~ q~~allty lea tur n yw want
ancl lhfllmart s lyle (1\ildre~ looK for . And we' ll ma tch Jilt r1gl'll
shoe Ia your chlld 'l foot for m~lc llleu comtor l

rib or bulky cardigan sweaters .

waistcoats. blazers. jackets soft turtleneck sweater and
and smocks.
scarf.

Topping pants - sweaters
can't be beat' Dolman, rag.
lan and kimono sleeves are
new th1s year, espectally m
1ce cream colors of fuzzy
~oha1r or .~ ngora that say
touch me.
In addition to the sweater
and shirt type of layering
there is the endless supply
of toppers to go with pants .
You have a wide choice in

Vests in a plaid or a tweed ,
contrast-patterned o v e r a
crisp checked shirt look neat
with s o I i d color tailored
trousers . And over it ali ,
perhaps a new wrap and tie
blazer in corduroy.

~~

The cropped battle jacket
buttoned or zipped up the
front is great looking with
matching pants that come
high up on the waist and a

)\,

Socl'al

•

I At Carnival

J e a n s get dressier a nd
more varied . Often pleated
and high rise, they, too,
come in plaids and solids.
'W i d e wale and no-wale.
straight-legged and flared .
And quilting - once reserved solely for linings turns itself inside out and
becomes the outside of jackets , coats and even jeans.

~ Ca Iend ar~~

Games , bicycle rides,
clowns, music and refreshments will be features of the
Muscular Dystrophy Carnival
which will be officially opened
Friday at noon, Aug . 25, at
Middleport Municipal Park by
Mayor John Zerkle.
Keith Black is ringmaster
and Euiah Francis is general
chairman. Tickets are now
available at 5 cents each, and
may be purchased from Patty
Boyles, Angela Payne, Lisa
Baker, Lisa Scaggs, David
Vance, Tony Scott, June Justis,
Keith Scott or Kimberly Payne
of Middleport; Judy Hall of
Pomeroy, and Deanna Denny
of Rutland.
Adults assisting are Mrs.
Caroiyn Vance , Marion
·
Francis and Linda Boyles.

;,.:.:.-.:-··:-··x·v."···:·:...~-.:~
~

~

Personal Notes

....

104

E. MAIN

SHOES

POMEROY,
OHIO

~

Refrigerator
19

RUTLAND FURNITURE R~~~.~~="
.

cu.

ft. Side by Side,

Copper tone.
teed.

Guaran·

'24cr'
GE 30" Range
Aut omatic, Copper tone
Guaranteed

$22900

With
Giblet

Black Ribier,
Red Cardinal, or
Thompson Seedless

Spi.U,

-.=,..,..,

30% Off
All Lawn
Furniture

Son Born Sunday

~~IT'S

•

Admiral

. Mr. and Mrs. Edward
Burkett are at home after a
week's vacation in Colorado.
They flew to Denver and then
traveled by car about a
thousand miles to surrounding
points or interest, including
Georgetown, site of gold and
silver mines; to the Vail Ski
resort where moderm, plush
accommodations are in the
style of a Swiss Alpine village ;
Buffalo Bills' grave at the top
of Lookout Mountain, and Red
Rock Theater, situated between two mountain peaks of
red rock . The theater is said to
have the best acoustics in the
nation.

WEDNESDAY
Mr. and Mrs. Tony May and
AMERICAN LEGION
family spent the weekend in
Auxiliary, Feeney-Bennett
Frankfort, Ky., their home
Post 128,7:30 Wednesday at the
before coming to Middleport.
hall .
Ten couples held a cookout for
DISTRICT Governor of 13-K
the Mays, and they&gt; also atMr. and Mrs. Michael
Russell Williams, will be guest
tended a wedding there.
Wright, Middleport, announce
speaker at a luncheon to be
Mr . and Mrs . Robert the birth of a son, Jason Lee,
held at noon Wednesday at the
Coleman of Eleanor, W. Va., Aug. 20 at Holzer Medical
Meigs Inn. All Lions urged to
were recent guests of Mr. and Center. The infimt weighed 8'h
attend.
Mrs. Jack Bechtle.
pounds. They have a daughter,
WSCS OF Wesleyan United
Mrs. Charlotte Taunton and Tammy Kathyrene, 2'h years
Methodist Church, Racine,
daughter, Jennifer, were old.
annual picnic, 6 p.m . Wedrecent dinner guests of Miss
Grandparents are Mr. and
nesday at swnmer home of Mr.
Sara Bechtle.
.Mrs. James Whitlatch, Mid·
and Mrs. Gordon West. All
Friends have received word dieport, and Mr. and Mrs.
women of church and families
that Miss Maud Taylor, former Lioyg Wright, Pomeroy, greatinvited. Take covered dish and
Middlep~rt resident who grandparents are Everett
table service.
resides at Kimes Nursing p earson, Chares
1 t
on, w. va.,
WOMEN'S Bowling Assn .
Home, Athens, recently suf- Mrs. Beulah Ochier, CoiwnWednesday,
7:30
p.m.
fered a heart attack.
b J v N. 1 p k r b g
us, . . ea,aresur,
Pomeroy Bowling Lanes. First
GALLIPOLIS, OHIO,
Mrs.
Robert
Craig,
Cindy
and·oren
L. Wright, southgate,
meeting, ali women invited.
Saturday, Aug. 19, 1972
and Pat, Leo Searls and Jan Calif. Mrs. Bertha Little of
THURSDAY
SALES REPORT OF
Kennedy of Rutland, and Darla Columbus is a great.great
ROCK SPRINGS Grange
Ohio Valley Livestock Co.
Ebersbach of Pomeroy have grandmother and Mr. B. B
HOGS - 175 to 220 ibs. 28.50 Thursday, 7:30 p.m.
from Swansboro and Sheets, Parkersburg is a greatreturned
to 29.50; 220 to 250 lbs. 29.25 to ALL GIRLS interested in
RETURNS HOME
Atlantic Beach, N. C., where great grandfather.
29.75; Light 27 to 28.50; Fat joining or forming a team, be
Mrs. Geraldine Circle has they spent a week vacationing.
Sows 23 to 25; Stags 21 Down ; at the Pomqoy Bowling Lanes returned to her home in Toledo
Perry Hoffman suffered a
Boars 20 to 22.75; Pigs 10 to Thursday, August 24, at 12 after a week of visiting with severe heart attack Friday
noon.
22.50; Shoats 20 to 31.
her uncle and aunt, Mr. and while at his employment at
CATTLE- Steers 32 to 40;
TWIN-CITY Shrinettes, 7:30 Mrs . L. L. Roush . Other Ohio Valley !laking Co. He is
Heifers 28 to 37.50; Baby Beef Thursday, Columbus and visitors at the Roush home confined to Veterans Memorial
35 to 48; Fat Cows 20 to 25; Southern Ohio Electric Co.
.during Mrs. Circle's stay were Hospital.
Canners 17.50 to 27 ; Bulls 28 to Plans to be made for Sep- Mr. and Mrs. Robert Circle of
32.75; Milk Cows 175 to 375.
tember visit of high priestess. Toledo and Mrs. Roscoe Morris
VEAL CALVES.:... Tops 52.80
GET-ACQUAINTED party of Gallipolis . While here the
to 54; Seconds 47.50 to 51 ; for children and parents of Robert Circles visited with his
PARTY GIVEN
Medium 45 to 48.25; Com. &amp; Eastern Local School District aunt, Mrs. Wilbur Theobald.
Julie
Ann
Kitchen celebrated
Hvs. 44.50 to 52; Culls 45 Down. kindergarten, I to 3, p.m.
her
eleventh
birthday anBABY CALVES - 25 to 75. Thursday ,
at
Chester
niversary with a slumber party
LAMBS - Tops 31; Seconds elementary school. Refresha t her home Saturday night.
28.50 to 29.60; Light Wts. 22 to ments.
IN NORTil CAROLINA
Present were Joni Murray,
25.50; Common 23.50 Down.
WEEKEND
Quarterly
Mr. and Mrs. Clarence E. Kim Payne, Carin Bailey and
meeting at Pomeroy Lower Norton and family, Pomeroy;
Joy Beaver. Refreshments
Light Church Thursday, 7:30 p. Mr. and Mrs. Qon HunUey and
were pizza, potato chips and
m. District superintendent family of Logan, Mr. and Mrs. pop.
Rev. Roy Taylor: speaker. , James Prater of Dundas and
PT. PLEASANT
Rev. O'Dell Manley, pastor. Mr. and Mrs. Cariis Prater of
UVESTOCK SALES CO.
Public invited.
McArthur spent several days
PT. PLEASANT, W. VA.
ON VACATION
FRIDAY
in Surf City, N. C. Enroute they
Mrs. James Hawley is on
Saturday, Aug. 19, 1972
ORIENTATION of new camped on Blue Ridge ParkHOGS - 175 to 220 29.25 to teachers Southern Loca l High way and visited Natural vacation from her employment
at the Blue and Gray
29.60; Heavies 25 to 26.35; School Friday from 8:15 to Bridge, Va.
Restaurant.
Lights 24 to 26; Fat Sows 25 to 9:30 ; social period from 9:30 to
2S.60; Boars 22 to 23.20; Pigs 15 10 a. m. with a teachers
to 19 ; Stock Shoats 24 to 32.
meeting for ali teachers of the
~----~---------,··
CATTLE '- Steers 30.60 to district at 10 a. m.
Big Capacity
36; Heifers 25 to 29.90; Fat
BELLING AND shower at
Maylag
Automatics·
Cows 25 to 27; Canners 21.60 to the Hemlock Grange hail
2 speed operation .
24.50; Bulls 30 to 36.75; Stock Friday evening 8 o'clock for
Choic:e of water
Cows and Calves 275 to 400; Mr. and Mrs . Michael
· temps.
Auto .
water
leve
l
Stock Steers 37 to 42.50; St&amp;k Hazelton. Everyone welcome.
control .
Lint
H~ifers 35 to 37.50; Stock Steer
Filler or Power
VESPER MEETING Friday,
Fin Agifalor .
Calves 40 to 47.25; Stock Heifer 7 p.m., home of Floyd Norris, '
Ptrmi· Prtss
Calves 35 to 39. 75.
East Letart, followed by
Moylo~
VEAL CALVES - Tops wiener roast. Public invited.
HIIO of Hilt
Dryers
52.50; Secoods 52.30; Medium Bring lawn chairs.
Surrounct clothes
50 to 50.50; Common &amp; Heavies
with gentle, even
SATURDAY
heat . No hot spots
48 to 49.75; Culls 46 to 48.
no
overdrylng . .
OLD FASHIONED ice cream
BABY C.\LVES - $70 Down.
Fine Mtsh Lint
social Saturday, beginning at 5
· Market Strong .
FIller. ·
.
w,_$ peclollzeln
p. m. at Coi.wnbia Chapel
.
, .•
,.,
MAYTAG
Church, Point Rock, o~ route
689. Sandwiches, pie, take and
Medicare, health insurance beverage, will also be sold.
for the aged, became official Proceeds to be used for·
741-4211
Arnold Grate ·
Rutland
on July I, 1966.
building fund. ·
1

CHAPMAN'S

New Bargains
That Can't Be
Beat· • •

Burketts Fly,
Drive in West

df'' .,. ., .w.·..
•
~~Fun
Promzse l~~ M1e
'ddl port ~~
~

~-~,:~:::::0«-:?::J

i .t,$

Mrs. Charles Warner,
Ebenezer Street, has returned
tu her home after spending a
recuperative period at tbe
home or her son, John Sewell.
Mr.s. W~rner underwent eye
surgery in July at Holzer
Medical Center.
·
Mrs . Leonard VanMeter
attended the funeral services
Monday for her late uncle,
William Trigo, in Columbus.
Burial was at Chillicothe.
Mrs . Gerald Kelly and
daughter, Darla, of Hollywood
are visiting at the home of Mr.
and Mrs. Allen Eichinger and
other relatives.

Market Report

_,. .,. ,. , a happy ~?: ·

TRIDERrrE

NEW YORK - 1NEA1 There is lots going on. over
and under for fail . Pants are
a staple once again, ·in a
variety of lengths. widths
and s haP e s. Jeans, highwaisted baggies , c u f fed
shorts and with them lavers
and layers of body s u j t s,
shirts. turtleneck shi rts, erachet vests, shrinks. skinny

I Personal Notes

announces•
t

NEA Women's Editor

t

Chapman's
;e

By HELEN HENNESSY

nationwide with the support
and active participation of
b~sinessmen, labor leaders,
gover nment officials and ~;,o;:o,::~-&gt;'&gt;~~'i,.~~:;&lt;::::,:::,;,~.
educators.
Rio Grande College is a
... ;;:
member or' the Association of ~~
Independent Colleges and
Universities of Ohio (AICUO) .

Coil~ges .

WHERE ECONOMY ORIGINATES

Number '25'
Is Celebrated

DEAR POLLY-When a projector screen is not avail·
able I find that the television ·set makes an excellent
screen for showing slides or film.-ROBERT

Independent Colleges

9- The Daily Sentinel, MldcDeport-Pomeroy, 0 ., August 23, 1972

Norge Gas OJYt!f
(Guaranteed)

$4900

DEL MONTE

~-..;,.__
....

IJ_

IN

'

15l&gt;·oz.

~,~JUICE

8g·

cano

4-0¢

Portable, De lu xe

SCOTT'S WALDORF

GE Dishwasher

1JaiJvtMIIIJ Tiaaue• rot•

(Only One )

r ..ataaef. ~

Full Guarantee
.

$19900

UU.fiCG'

"""!"'~"""

eouee.
0

WAREHOUSE PRICED MAXWEll

HOUSE • • • • •

e
a!ul&amp;fkl --oowe&amp;~

KEEBLER ICED

IJ

L •

oan

IS-oz.

pkr.

35¢
el.on.cMc, 111cuaeJ.i~:~·

1;:~.

:!JJ

97t
_

l-Ib.

HAIR SPRAY

EVERYDAY lOW PRICE

89-~

$L-L.-:-.. S-Ib,

69t
It~aloatJL Neafea, ~~;··
Juat· Worden''''~
lr:;z.

ICED TEA MIX

H&amp;R
FIRESTONE
N. 2nd

_

$182

MAXWELl HOUSE

WHY PAY MOREl

'f A - ! - - -

.

46¢
'

59~

l~"x75' 72~

\Tf

~tUKa.&amp;t ••nap··n

6
IJ ge
llk&gt;l.50t
KNeQ.;tt •••• ~ pk•··~ ~'9 Nea·lht~.a, ••

992-2238
Middleport. 0.

All FLAVORS

IIRDSEYE

..

FROZE~&lt;!

C4at, ~OR

TRUE" - • •

NABl!CO

PEAS

ARM:;-UR ,

7

6.5-oz.l ¢
can

a a

410-oz$100
pkr~
ll-oz.2 7t

.

pq.

ROBIN HOOD
..,..,...

?altai a

28'1.-&lt;&gt;z.25t
pkp.

vw..uua, SGI•aage 29. MaJXiM~, ~ • ':
M
•
e
HL- 'FJWill ~"""
Gft9GIUM.el • • • •
EVERYDAY LOW PRICE

'f

46-oz.

46-oz.IJ

ALL FL,t.,VORS

1J J;

Ha•,aii«M~ "Pwv.~t,.,." ~ ~"

$111

FREEZE DRIED

45~

FLEISCHMANN'S STICK

l-Ib,

pliJ.

,Jumbo

ASSORTED, DECORMTED

Se,ott, Toeuela, •
~

ro11

115~

~

119~

69 ·Kool4id· ••• -~~t:.~
¢

.lulu~ •. 3!it·.

~

Sue25~
on 2-lb. pkg. All Varieties

.JlU.y MeAt!

£~

WITH THIS COUPON

Good :Thru Sot., Aug. 26th
At All A&amp;P WEO~IS!t!W:
or~es~~~

SC~A~e25~
On 2-lb. pkg. Cap'n John Breaded
I

Oeeo.., ~ "PO'di="&amp;• 1
WITH THIS COUPON

SUGAR SWEETENED

WEOCOUPON ~

WEO COUPON

King Size

Hunt's

Oxyt~-e

Kelehup

: :.~: gge
box

~~-2

WITH
THIS I
COUPON

Good Thru Sat., Aug. 26th

4

e~~i~

COUPON

At All A&amp;P WEO Stores

~
WEO COUPON

Instant Coffee

Naeaf,e

";'- ~11·9

WITH
THIS
COUPON

Good Thru Sat., Aug. 26th
At All A&amp;P WEO Stores
LIMIT ONE

84-0I.

btl.

Good Thru Sat., Aug. 26th
MAll A&amp;P WEO Stores
LIMIT ONE ~
.. ~
.. ~.~

WITH
THIS
COUPON

Good Thru Sat., Aug. 26th
At All A&amp;P WEO Stores
LIMIT ONI

WITH
THIS
COUPON

Good Thru Sat., Aug. 26th
At All A&amp;P WEO Stores
~!® LIMIT ONE !11\'ii\IL 00 \ill\'!Jili\

�a- 'lbe Dally Sentinel, MldcDeport-Pcmeroy, 0., August 23, 1972

..

FASHION

POLLY'S POINTERS
Two Ways to Shop.

B&amp;PW Club$ Dined .

Pants Coming Back for the Fall

With Toddlers in Tow

.

Members of the . Gallipolis nurses, Holier Medical Center,
Business and Professional thanking . the club · for the
Women's Club were guests scholurshtp for Debbie Wood
Monday eve/ling when ' the ' and reporting on her p~ogress ..
Middleport B&amp;PW dilled at the A thank you note · was read
home of Mr. aqd Mrs. John from Betty Conkle .
·
Patk St.
remembrances·;1n recetve~•
Werner,
DurilUl the business meeting during a recen 1 1 ess. . . .
presided over by Mrs. Werner,
Madge Neal of the Galltpoh~
recognition was given three club th~nked Mtddleport Ciu~
members of tbe Gallipolis club for thetr mvi~tJOr. Meetmg
Lola Mae Suiter, EsU: opened with club collect and
McKnight and Edith Hut- closed wtth prayer. Ga"_les
sinpiller who assisted in were played, and the_ traveJt~g
organizing the Middleport club prize donated by Rll&lt;! LeWIS
in 1946 Recognition was also· was awarded Grace Pratt.
given ihree charter members Mrs. Lewil! was chatrman of
of the Middleport Club, the hostess commtttee. . .
F:ieddie Houdashelt, Edith . Attending fro.m GallipQhs
Forrest ·and Pearl Reynolds. were Esta McKmght, Flore~ce
Fairie Kennedy received a gift Willis, Joan Wood, Ehse
in recognition of her twenty- Kimball, Lucy Earwood, Mary
five years of service.
Jane Neal, Bermce McMahon.'
A letter was read from Isabelle Btas, Edtth Hut,
Bernice Skehan, ·director of sinpillar, . Lola Mae Sutter,
Thelma Neal, FlosSie Trout,
Marianne Campbell, Betty
Betz, Grace 'tabor and Madge
Neal.
Steve Place, nephew of
Freddie Houdasheit, was also a ·
guest.

.

By POLLY CRAMER

f0:

DEAR POLLY-! have an answer for Mrs. C. W. who
has trouble shopping with a baby and a · toddler. My
baby's stroller has a wire basket on the back $0 I strall
the baby in his carrier and put the_carrier in t~e ba_s k~t.
The wire piece that makes the earner stand up JUSt ftts m
the basket so baby cannot fall. My toddler ts put m the
seat of th~ stroller so I have them both in the one.ROSALYN

-

Polly's .Problem

----11!

DEAR POLLY- How dOfS one get perspira.tion·
odor out of foam rubber !lillows and a mattress?
My boys perspire so during' the summer and these ,
pillows cannot be washed. Does anyone have a soi: J
tion for my problem?- JUNE

Lm--lllii·i®; _ _ _

.

DEAR POLLY-I can sympathize with Mrs. C. W. who
finds shopping with a baby
and a toddler a real problem as I have a six-monthold baby and a 4-year-old.
I have ·a heavy fabric back
carrier that can be worn
either in the front or the
back. J strap baby on in
the front and she cuddles
·up for a nap and my hands
are left free to m@nage the
other child and shop. MRS. M. V. S.

DEAR POLLY-My Pet Peeve is with all those couyons
that come in the mail. How much better it would be I the
companies '!"Ould spend that money ll!lducing the price of
the products, even if it was only a cent or two. Also, those
coupons that are stuck all through the magazines are a
nuisance, so please let us have some respite from coupons
and give us a reduction in prices instead.-INDA

The 25th wedding anniversary of Mr. and Mrs.
Herman Grate was observed
Aug. 20 when a surprise party
was given by Mr. and Mrs.
John Grate of New Haven.
Ice cream and cake were
served to ' Mr. and Mrs. Otis
Hesson , New Haven ; Mr. and
Mrs. George Grate and family,
Mrs . Bonnie Nicholson, Vicki
Grate and Don Hysell.

Quilting plus ribiess corduroy plus jeans plus the layered look and you hove a quartet of the important
locks of the &gt;eoson . Quilted ribless jeans (left) ore by Toilfeot.hers and are comp lemented by a sunny yellow
shirt, shrink sweater, jaunty cop and soft suede moccas1ns. Bodysuit .topped by knit pullover topped by
happy face (right ) from Seaton Hall 's what style 1s all about.

(NEWSPAPER ENTERPRISE ASSN.)

You will receive a dollar If Polly uses your favorite
bomemaldDg Idea, Pel Peeve, Polly's Problem or solution
to a problem. Write Polly In care of this newspaper.

Facing Money Troubles
'

RIO GRANDE
An
estimated 200 of America's
independent colleges may not
survive aqother year, according to Father Paul
Reinert, president of St. Louis
University and chairman of the
Association of American
Father Reinert has authored
"To TW"n The Tide," which
studies !he economic dangers
lacing public and private
sectors of higher education.
The book incorporated the
findings of "Project Search," a
nationwide survey effort.
Father Reinert declared in
his book that the tide may still
be burned against the immediate threat of financial
disaster. However, it will only
be possible if immediate
cooperative action is taken by ·
educators , businessmen,
government officials and other
responsible leaders.
Father Reinert's findings
have been accepted within the
education community according to Dr . Thomas
Langevin, president of Capital
University and of the
Association of Independent
Colleges an:! Universities of
Ohio (AICUO). He said
educators in many disciplines
are in accord with its merits.
The study was conducted

GRANDSON HONORED
Mr. and Mrs. Eddie Kitchen
Sr. hosted a birthday party for
their grandson, J. R., at the
home of Mr. and Mrs. Eddie
Kitchen, Jr ., Ash Street,
Middleport, on Monday, Aug.
21. J . R. is three years old.
Decorated ice cream cone cup
cakes and ice cream were
served to Luke, Chris, Tracy
and Kellee Burdette. Mrs.
Cherole
Burdette,
Jo
McKinney,Joni Murray, Robin
and Julie Kitchen. Sending
gifts were Mrs . Ruth Gosney
and Mrs. Jennie Hansher .

MAN DROWNS

BATAVIA, Ohio (UPI)Rodney Stidham, 22, of
Reading, drowned Tuesday in
Hidden Valley Lake, located in
Stonelick Township in Clermont County.

new
arrival
I

''I

/I
;

SHOE

r·
' -

'

l

I

I .

)

"!

Pomeroy

·~

.

:.

Fam01u Stride Rile1, best known to generations of concernt'd
mother s for qu ~ll tv . t rlllbmtnsl'llp , ancllautten t it In line sho-es
ffom Inf ant to pr,e.feoen, ore equallr tamov~ lor lhtlr t&amp;! hiOMble
QOOd look !. Our ! I.Jit ollrtlnt'd e ~perl~ will Ill yollr ch,lc:J 10 the
llntsl pie~ shoe1, l('hoollhl'lel , party 1hoe1, rl/ilo lurn-to wtl~
1h~ bv Strldl! R:lle. mact. with t~ q~~allty lea tur n yw want
ancl lhfllmart s lyle (1\ildre~ looK for . And we' ll ma tch Jilt r1gl'll
shoe Ia your chlld 'l foot for m~lc llleu comtor l

rib or bulky cardigan sweaters .

waistcoats. blazers. jackets soft turtleneck sweater and
and smocks.
scarf.

Topping pants - sweaters
can't be beat' Dolman, rag.
lan and kimono sleeves are
new th1s year, espectally m
1ce cream colors of fuzzy
~oha1r or .~ ngora that say
touch me.
In addition to the sweater
and shirt type of layering
there is the endless supply
of toppers to go with pants .
You have a wide choice in

Vests in a plaid or a tweed ,
contrast-patterned o v e r a
crisp checked shirt look neat
with s o I i d color tailored
trousers . And over it ali ,
perhaps a new wrap and tie
blazer in corduroy.

~~

The cropped battle jacket
buttoned or zipped up the
front is great looking with
matching pants that come
high up on the waist and a

)\,

Socl'al

•

I At Carnival

J e a n s get dressier a nd
more varied . Often pleated
and high rise, they, too,
come in plaids and solids.
'W i d e wale and no-wale.
straight-legged and flared .
And quilting - once reserved solely for linings turns itself inside out and
becomes the outside of jackets , coats and even jeans.

~ Ca Iend ar~~

Games , bicycle rides,
clowns, music and refreshments will be features of the
Muscular Dystrophy Carnival
which will be officially opened
Friday at noon, Aug . 25, at
Middleport Municipal Park by
Mayor John Zerkle.
Keith Black is ringmaster
and Euiah Francis is general
chairman. Tickets are now
available at 5 cents each, and
may be purchased from Patty
Boyles, Angela Payne, Lisa
Baker, Lisa Scaggs, David
Vance, Tony Scott, June Justis,
Keith Scott or Kimberly Payne
of Middleport; Judy Hall of
Pomeroy, and Deanna Denny
of Rutland.
Adults assisting are Mrs.
Caroiyn Vance , Marion
·
Francis and Linda Boyles.

;,.:.:.-.:-··:-··x·v."···:·:...~-.:~
~

~

Personal Notes

....

104

E. MAIN

SHOES

POMEROY,
OHIO

~

Refrigerator
19

RUTLAND FURNITURE R~~~.~~="
.

cu.

ft. Side by Side,

Copper tone.
teed.

Guaran·

'24cr'
GE 30" Range
Aut omatic, Copper tone
Guaranteed

$22900

With
Giblet

Black Ribier,
Red Cardinal, or
Thompson Seedless

Spi.U,

-.=,..,..,

30% Off
All Lawn
Furniture

Son Born Sunday

~~IT'S

•

Admiral

. Mr. and Mrs. Edward
Burkett are at home after a
week's vacation in Colorado.
They flew to Denver and then
traveled by car about a
thousand miles to surrounding
points or interest, including
Georgetown, site of gold and
silver mines; to the Vail Ski
resort where moderm, plush
accommodations are in the
style of a Swiss Alpine village ;
Buffalo Bills' grave at the top
of Lookout Mountain, and Red
Rock Theater, situated between two mountain peaks of
red rock . The theater is said to
have the best acoustics in the
nation.

WEDNESDAY
Mr. and Mrs. Tony May and
AMERICAN LEGION
family spent the weekend in
Auxiliary, Feeney-Bennett
Frankfort, Ky., their home
Post 128,7:30 Wednesday at the
before coming to Middleport.
hall .
Ten couples held a cookout for
DISTRICT Governor of 13-K
the Mays, and they&gt; also atMr. and Mrs. Michael
Russell Williams, will be guest
tended a wedding there.
Wright, Middleport, announce
speaker at a luncheon to be
Mr . and Mrs . Robert the birth of a son, Jason Lee,
held at noon Wednesday at the
Coleman of Eleanor, W. Va., Aug. 20 at Holzer Medical
Meigs Inn. All Lions urged to
were recent guests of Mr. and Center. The infimt weighed 8'h
attend.
Mrs. Jack Bechtle.
pounds. They have a daughter,
WSCS OF Wesleyan United
Mrs. Charlotte Taunton and Tammy Kathyrene, 2'h years
Methodist Church, Racine,
daughter, Jennifer, were old.
annual picnic, 6 p.m . Wedrecent dinner guests of Miss
Grandparents are Mr. and
nesday at swnmer home of Mr.
Sara Bechtle.
.Mrs. James Whitlatch, Mid·
and Mrs. Gordon West. All
Friends have received word dieport, and Mr. and Mrs.
women of church and families
that Miss Maud Taylor, former Lioyg Wright, Pomeroy, greatinvited. Take covered dish and
Middlep~rt resident who grandparents are Everett
table service.
resides at Kimes Nursing p earson, Chares
1 t
on, w. va.,
WOMEN'S Bowling Assn .
Home, Athens, recently suf- Mrs. Beulah Ochier, CoiwnWednesday,
7:30
p.m.
fered a heart attack.
b J v N. 1 p k r b g
us, . . ea,aresur,
Pomeroy Bowling Lanes. First
GALLIPOLIS, OHIO,
Mrs.
Robert
Craig,
Cindy
and·oren
L. Wright, southgate,
meeting, ali women invited.
Saturday, Aug. 19, 1972
and Pat, Leo Searls and Jan Calif. Mrs. Bertha Little of
THURSDAY
SALES REPORT OF
Kennedy of Rutland, and Darla Columbus is a great.great
ROCK SPRINGS Grange
Ohio Valley Livestock Co.
Ebersbach of Pomeroy have grandmother and Mr. B. B
HOGS - 175 to 220 ibs. 28.50 Thursday, 7:30 p.m.
from Swansboro and Sheets, Parkersburg is a greatreturned
to 29.50; 220 to 250 lbs. 29.25 to ALL GIRLS interested in
RETURNS HOME
Atlantic Beach, N. C., where great grandfather.
29.75; Light 27 to 28.50; Fat joining or forming a team, be
Mrs. Geraldine Circle has they spent a week vacationing.
Sows 23 to 25; Stags 21 Down ; at the Pomqoy Bowling Lanes returned to her home in Toledo
Perry Hoffman suffered a
Boars 20 to 22.75; Pigs 10 to Thursday, August 24, at 12 after a week of visiting with severe heart attack Friday
noon.
22.50; Shoats 20 to 31.
her uncle and aunt, Mr. and while at his employment at
CATTLE- Steers 32 to 40;
TWIN-CITY Shrinettes, 7:30 Mrs . L. L. Roush . Other Ohio Valley !laking Co. He is
Heifers 28 to 37.50; Baby Beef Thursday, Columbus and visitors at the Roush home confined to Veterans Memorial
35 to 48; Fat Cows 20 to 25; Southern Ohio Electric Co.
.during Mrs. Circle's stay were Hospital.
Canners 17.50 to 27 ; Bulls 28 to Plans to be made for Sep- Mr. and Mrs. Robert Circle of
32.75; Milk Cows 175 to 375.
tember visit of high priestess. Toledo and Mrs. Roscoe Morris
VEAL CALVES.:... Tops 52.80
GET-ACQUAINTED party of Gallipolis . While here the
to 54; Seconds 47.50 to 51 ; for children and parents of Robert Circles visited with his
PARTY GIVEN
Medium 45 to 48.25; Com. &amp; Eastern Local School District aunt, Mrs. Wilbur Theobald.
Julie
Ann
Kitchen celebrated
Hvs. 44.50 to 52; Culls 45 Down. kindergarten, I to 3, p.m.
her
eleventh
birthday anBABY CALVES - 25 to 75. Thursday ,
at
Chester
niversary with a slumber party
LAMBS - Tops 31; Seconds elementary school. Refresha t her home Saturday night.
28.50 to 29.60; Light Wts. 22 to ments.
IN NORTil CAROLINA
Present were Joni Murray,
25.50; Common 23.50 Down.
WEEKEND
Quarterly
Mr. and Mrs. Clarence E. Kim Payne, Carin Bailey and
meeting at Pomeroy Lower Norton and family, Pomeroy;
Joy Beaver. Refreshments
Light Church Thursday, 7:30 p. Mr. and Mrs. Qon HunUey and
were pizza, potato chips and
m. District superintendent family of Logan, Mr. and Mrs. pop.
Rev. Roy Taylor: speaker. , James Prater of Dundas and
PT. PLEASANT
Rev. O'Dell Manley, pastor. Mr. and Mrs. Cariis Prater of
UVESTOCK SALES CO.
Public invited.
McArthur spent several days
PT. PLEASANT, W. VA.
ON VACATION
FRIDAY
in Surf City, N. C. Enroute they
Mrs. James Hawley is on
Saturday, Aug. 19, 1972
ORIENTATION of new camped on Blue Ridge ParkHOGS - 175 to 220 29.25 to teachers Southern Loca l High way and visited Natural vacation from her employment
at the Blue and Gray
29.60; Heavies 25 to 26.35; School Friday from 8:15 to Bridge, Va.
Restaurant.
Lights 24 to 26; Fat Sows 25 to 9:30 ; social period from 9:30 to
2S.60; Boars 22 to 23.20; Pigs 15 10 a. m. with a teachers
to 19 ; Stock Shoats 24 to 32.
meeting for ali teachers of the
~----~---------,··
CATTLE '- Steers 30.60 to district at 10 a. m.
Big Capacity
36; Heifers 25 to 29.90; Fat
BELLING AND shower at
Maylag
Automatics·
Cows 25 to 27; Canners 21.60 to the Hemlock Grange hail
2 speed operation .
24.50; Bulls 30 to 36.75; Stock Friday evening 8 o'clock for
Choic:e of water
Cows and Calves 275 to 400; Mr. and Mrs . Michael
· temps.
Auto .
water
leve
l
Stock Steers 37 to 42.50; St&amp;k Hazelton. Everyone welcome.
control .
Lint
H~ifers 35 to 37.50; Stock Steer
Filler or Power
VESPER MEETING Friday,
Fin Agifalor .
Calves 40 to 47.25; Stock Heifer 7 p.m., home of Floyd Norris, '
Ptrmi· Prtss
Calves 35 to 39. 75.
East Letart, followed by
Moylo~
VEAL CALVES - Tops wiener roast. Public invited.
HIIO of Hilt
Dryers
52.50; Secoods 52.30; Medium Bring lawn chairs.
Surrounct clothes
50 to 50.50; Common &amp; Heavies
with gentle, even
SATURDAY
heat . No hot spots
48 to 49.75; Culls 46 to 48.
no
overdrylng . .
OLD FASHIONED ice cream
BABY C.\LVES - $70 Down.
Fine Mtsh Lint
social Saturday, beginning at 5
· Market Strong .
FIller. ·
.
w,_$ peclollzeln
p. m. at Coi.wnbia Chapel
.
, .•
,.,
MAYTAG
Church, Point Rock, o~ route
689. Sandwiches, pie, take and
Medicare, health insurance beverage, will also be sold.
for the aged, became official Proceeds to be used for·
741-4211
Arnold Grate ·
Rutland
on July I, 1966.
building fund. ·
1

CHAPMAN'S

New Bargains
That Can't Be
Beat· • •

Burketts Fly,
Drive in West

df'' .,. ., .w.·..
•
~~Fun
Promzse l~~ M1e
'ddl port ~~
~

~-~,:~:::::0«-:?::J

i .t,$

Mrs. Charles Warner,
Ebenezer Street, has returned
tu her home after spending a
recuperative period at tbe
home or her son, John Sewell.
Mr.s. W~rner underwent eye
surgery in July at Holzer
Medical Center.
·
Mrs . Leonard VanMeter
attended the funeral services
Monday for her late uncle,
William Trigo, in Columbus.
Burial was at Chillicothe.
Mrs . Gerald Kelly and
daughter, Darla, of Hollywood
are visiting at the home of Mr.
and Mrs. Allen Eichinger and
other relatives.

Market Report

_,. .,. ,. , a happy ~?: ·

TRIDERrrE

NEW YORK - 1NEA1 There is lots going on. over
and under for fail . Pants are
a staple once again, ·in a
variety of lengths. widths
and s haP e s. Jeans, highwaisted baggies , c u f fed
shorts and with them lavers
and layers of body s u j t s,
shirts. turtleneck shi rts, erachet vests, shrinks. skinny

I Personal Notes

announces•
t

NEA Women's Editor

t

Chapman's
;e

By HELEN HENNESSY

nationwide with the support
and active participation of
b~sinessmen, labor leaders,
gover nment officials and ~;,o;:o,::~-&gt;'&gt;~~'i,.~~:;&lt;::::,:::,;,~.
educators.
Rio Grande College is a
... ;;:
member or' the Association of ~~
Independent Colleges and
Universities of Ohio (AICUO) .

Coil~ges .

WHERE ECONOMY ORIGINATES

Number '25'
Is Celebrated

DEAR POLLY-When a projector screen is not avail·
able I find that the television ·set makes an excellent
screen for showing slides or film.-ROBERT

Independent Colleges

9- The Daily Sentinel, MldcDeport-Pomeroy, 0 ., August 23, 1972

Norge Gas OJYt!f
(Guaranteed)

$4900

DEL MONTE

~-..;,.__
....

IJ_

IN

'

15l&gt;·oz.

~,~JUICE

8g·

cano

4-0¢

Portable, De lu xe

SCOTT'S WALDORF

GE Dishwasher

1JaiJvtMIIIJ Tiaaue• rot•

(Only One )

r ..ataaef. ~

Full Guarantee
.

$19900

UU.fiCG'

"""!"'~"""

eouee.
0

WAREHOUSE PRICED MAXWEll

HOUSE • • • • •

e
a!ul&amp;fkl --oowe&amp;~

KEEBLER ICED

IJ

L •

oan

IS-oz.

pkr.

35¢
el.on.cMc, 111cuaeJ.i~:~·

1;:~.

:!JJ

97t
_

l-Ib.

HAIR SPRAY

EVERYDAY lOW PRICE

89-~

$L-L.-:-.. S-Ib,

69t
It~aloatJL Neafea, ~~;··
Juat· Worden''''~
lr:;z.

ICED TEA MIX

H&amp;R
FIRESTONE
N. 2nd

_

$182

MAXWELl HOUSE

WHY PAY MOREl

'f A - ! - - -

.

46¢
'

59~

l~"x75' 72~

\Tf

~tUKa.&amp;t ••nap··n

6
IJ ge
llk&gt;l.50t
KNeQ.;tt •••• ~ pk•··~ ~'9 Nea·lht~.a, ••

992-2238
Middleport. 0.

All FLAVORS

IIRDSEYE

..

FROZE~&lt;!

C4at, ~OR

TRUE" - • •

NABl!CO

PEAS

ARM:;-UR ,

7

6.5-oz.l ¢
can

a a

410-oz$100
pkr~
ll-oz.2 7t

.

pq.

ROBIN HOOD
..,..,...

?altai a

28'1.-&lt;&gt;z.25t
pkp.

vw..uua, SGI•aage 29. MaJXiM~, ~ • ':
M
•
e
HL- 'FJWill ~"""
Gft9GIUM.el • • • •
EVERYDAY LOW PRICE

'f

46-oz.

46-oz.IJ

ALL FL,t.,VORS

1J J;

Ha•,aii«M~ "Pwv.~t,.,." ~ ~"

$111

FREEZE DRIED

45~

FLEISCHMANN'S STICK

l-Ib,

pliJ.

,Jumbo

ASSORTED, DECORMTED

Se,ott, Toeuela, •
~

ro11

115~

~

119~

69 ·Kool4id· ••• -~~t:.~
¢

.lulu~ •. 3!it·.

~

Sue25~
on 2-lb. pkg. All Varieties

.JlU.y MeAt!

£~

WITH THIS COUPON

Good :Thru Sot., Aug. 26th
At All A&amp;P WEO~IS!t!W:
or~es~~~

SC~A~e25~
On 2-lb. pkg. Cap'n John Breaded
I

Oeeo.., ~ "PO'di="&amp;• 1
WITH THIS COUPON

SUGAR SWEETENED

WEOCOUPON ~

WEO COUPON

King Size

Hunt's

Oxyt~-e

Kelehup

: :.~: gge
box

~~-2

WITH
THIS I
COUPON

Good Thru Sat., Aug. 26th

4

e~~i~

COUPON

At All A&amp;P WEO Stores

~
WEO COUPON

Instant Coffee

Naeaf,e

";'- ~11·9

WITH
THIS
COUPON

Good Thru Sat., Aug. 26th
At All A&amp;P WEO Stores
LIMIT ONE

84-0I.

btl.

Good Thru Sat., Aug. 26th
MAll A&amp;P WEO Stores
LIMIT ONE ~
.. ~
.. ~.~

WITH
THIS
COUPON

Good Thru Sat., Aug. 26th
At All A&amp;P WEO Stores
LIMIT ONI

WITH
THIS
COUPON

Good Thru Sat., Aug. 26th
At All A&amp;P WEO Stores
~!® LIMIT ONE !11\'ii\IL 00 \ill\'!Jili\

�. .
,·

•

10- The Dally Sentinel, Mlddleport·POOlii'OY, 0., Augllll23, 111'12

C.t II

.Confrontation Possible Tonight in·Miami
MIAMI BEACH (UP! )-!Je..
monstrators rallied thejr
forces today for an attempt to
confront President Nixon with
a ball-empty hall when he
delivers his acceptance speech

at the Republican National
convention.
MiBml Beach Police Chief
Rocky Pomerance said be
hoped he would not have to call
upon 3,000 Florida National

Guardsmen and 2,500 federal
troops bein~ held in reserve in
case the disorders are too
much for regular law en·
forcement officers to control at
the final session of the. GOP

convention tonight.
. "We expect s0me more
testing," the police chief said.
"I hope we can do it with ow
civilian police. But I just don 't
know.''

McGovern
Exp]ains
Military
Stand
.
'

CHICAGO (lJt&gt;i ) - Sen.
George McGovern told the
American Legion today that
l)ls proposed,$20 biUlon cut In
Ute defense budget still would
leave the United States strong
enough to resist any threat.
In the first major address of
his campaign, the Democratic
nominee defended his demands
for steep cutbacks in defense
expenditures and total disen·
gagement from the Vietnam
War. He contended the real
danger to national security had
come from '1he men who used
0111' military power for pill'·
poseS Olll' people have rejec.
ted."

McGovern's prepared address to the Legion came at the
midpoint of a swing across the
country to build bridges to
organizations and individuals
who have been hostile to his
candidacy.
He met with former President Lyndon Johnson Tuesday
in Texas, scheduled a recon·
clllation meeting with Chicago
Mayor Richard Daley today
and will speak to the Veterans
of Foreign Wars Thursday.
"No foreign country will
push us around," McGovern
said, in contending his
jrOposed $20 billion cut from
the defense budget would leave
enough fire power to destroy
both Russia and China 20 times
over.
"We wlli have sufficient
power to resist attack, the
threat of attack, or the
diplomacy of blaclimail," he
said.
"I have devoted more time
and effort to my defense
postlll'e~ than to any othe•· part

.

Dale Swift
Died Today
Dale Calvin Swift, 47, of 163
Front Street , Middleport,
sports equipment manager for
Meigs High School in recent
years and ajso for Athens High
School earlier, passed away at
his residence this morning, ·
Swift was born September 13,
1924 , in Athens. He was
preceded in death by his
father, Ervie Swift. His
mother, Mrs. Hattie Semons
Swift, resides in 'Middleport.
He is survived also by a
brother, Deana Swift, and two
sisters, Mrs. Arthur (Mary )
Clark, New Albany ,-and Mrs.
Dwight (Martha) Gaskell,
Cuyahoga Falls, and several
aunts, uncles, nieces, nephews
and cousins.

Mr. Swift attended the
Middleport Chlll'ch of Christ.
He was a favorite of the
students at Meigs Marauder
basketball games.
Funeral services will be held
at 2 p. m. Friday at the
Rawlings-Coates
Funeral
Home in Middleport. The
minister will be the Rev. Rollin
Moyer. Burial will be at the
Hebbardsville Cemetery in
Athens. Calling hours are
Thursday 2-4 p.m. and 7-9 p. m.

ERROR CORRECTED
In the account oj the accident
•involving Ralph Harvey,
Pomeroy, it stated that Harvey
wen t off the road on the rtghl.
This was in error as Harvey
struck a fence to av oid a
collision wi th a parked car.

of my preparation lor the
presidency. I have made a
careful calculation of the
security needs of the country.
There is not a single possibility
that is not provided for, and

then some."
McGovern said the real

NEW YORK (UPI)-A bi·
zarre drama which began as a
bank robbery ended today
when an FBI agent shot and
killed one of two gunmen as
they and their seven hostages
met a wailing plane at Kennedy Airport.
~~The other gunman, a ho·
mosexual who at one point
demanded a reunion with his
unwilling former male lover,
surrendered . The hostages
were released unharmed.
An FBI agent who drove the
bandits and their hostages to
Kennedy Airport shot the
gunman in the chest.
During the 15'h holll' drama,
the homosexual threatened to
shoot the hostages because, he
said, Supreme Court decialons
made him immune from the
electric chair and two of the
original nine hostage bank
employes were released.
The gunman was shot just as
the plane was taxiing to a stop
beside the limousine which
brought the bandits and their
hostages to a remote airstrip at
Kennedy Airport, Assistant
FBI Director John F. Malone
said.
The gunmen were about to
board the plane when the agent
received "a silent signal" to
shoot, Malone added.
Drama Begins
The drama began when the
two gunmen, one reportedly

Moto-Cross
To ·Benefit
E-R Squad
The Meigs Motorcycle Club
will sponsor a Moto-Cross
Sur day, Aug. 27, for the benefit
of the Pomeroy emergency
squad.
The event will be held at the
club grounds located five miles
north of Pomeroy on U. S. 33.
Practice will be from 10 to 12
wi th races to begin at t p. m.
Refreshments will be available
at the club house.
·'
Trophies to be awarded in ail
classes are being donated by
Pomeroy merchants. Riders'
points will accumulate toward
a high point trophy to be
awarded at the last event.
Businesses donating trophies
are Blue and Grey Restaurant,
Fraternal Order of Eagles,
Karr and VanZa ndt, Jack's
Ashland, Hartley Shoes, K and
C Jewelers, Fabric Sh op,
Pomeroy Bowlin g Lanes,
P(\ITieroy Ben . Franklin ,
Swisher and Lohse , lola's, New
York Clothing House, Sears
Store, Farmers
Bank,
Pomeroy Nati onal Bank ,
Athens Cow1 ty Savings and
Loan, Economy Loan, City
Loan, Robinson Cleaners, Bill
and Lee's Music Center and
Power Constructors Inc.

carrying a pistol and the other
a shotgun, entered a branch of
the Chase Manhattan bank in
Brooklyn shortly before closing
time at 3 p.m. EDT Tuesday.
It started moving toward an
end when, at the insistence of
the gunmen who negotiated
with poliCe for almost 13 holll's,
an airport limousine pulled up
to the bank at about 4 a.m.

Hatchet

Slaying
Probed
IRONTON, Ohio (UP!) Lawrence County authorities
today said they are continuing
an investigation into the batch·
et slaying of William Scarber·
ry, 36, of nearby ·Possum Hoi·
low.
The office of Lawrence County Sheriff James H. Howell
said Scarberry's 13 year old
son was taken into custody,
questioned and later released
into the custody of an uncle
pending an appearance in Juvenile Court.
Juvenile Court Judge Roy
Henry said the exact time of
the appearance had not yet
been determined,
The sheriff's office said it
was notified by a neighbor at
about 5:50 p.m. Monday that
Scarberry had been involved in
an accident.
Howell said when he arrived
the victim had apparently been
removed from the house to the
front yard where he found the
body .
Scarberry was taken by am·
bulance to Lawrence County
General Hos pi tal and was
pronounced dead on arrival,
Howell said.
Howell said Scarberry was
apparently struck with the
sharp edge of a handaxe over
the left ear .
County Prosecutor William
Kennedy said the investigation
into the killing was incomplete.
He also said the exact location
of the incident inside the house
had not yet been verified,
although he said it was
believed to have occurred in
the kitchen .

fOday' S FUNNY
HOTHEADS Lost
lHEIRCWL

Todar's FUNNY· will pay $1 ,00 lor
.och origlnol "funny N11stcf. Send fCitl
to: Todc.r's FUNNY, 1200 Wett Third
St., Cleveland, Ohio 4.4113.

rt• ..........
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~

MEIGS COUNTY'S TIR.ECENTER

Say
"Get Well Please"
With A

FOLIAGE GARDEN
Greenhouse Fresh
From

RIZER OIL CO.
Pomeroy, 0.

•3,00

Dudley's Florist
59 N. Second St.
Middleport, 0.

992-5"0

looting a beer truCk and a
liquor atore.
·
Police made 210 arre.ts.
Slate troopers, aNI•ed by
marine patrol officers,
arrested 206 per110ns near the

Free Meal Policy Announced
.
The Eastern Local Board of
E:duca lion today announced a
free meal policy for Eastern
Local School children unable to
pay the price of a meaL
Loca I school officials have
adopted the following family
size and income scale to assist
them in determining eligibility .
· Families falling within this
scale, or those suffering

'

FBI Ends Drama

fOIIt OJIM.J7Y FEATURES•••
I

E. Mllln St.

delegates and tying Ull tra(fic.
Earlier demonstraiOI's had
roamed through the streets of
.this resort city, smash,ing
windows, cursing pedestrians,
pounding on passing cars, and

Applications may be submitted
any lime during the school
year.
The form itself is simple to
complete , and asks only Information needed to determine
the num ber of children in
school and any unusual cir·
cums tances or hardships
which affec t the family's
ability to pay for school lun·
unus ual circumstances or ches. Information provided· on
hardships may apply for free the application will be conmeals for their children. They fidential and will be used only
may do so by filling in the for the purpose of determining
applica tion forms sent home in eligibility.
EDT today. Leaving behind a letter to parents. Additional
Under the provisions of the
one woman hostage , the ·copies are avilabie at the policy the local superintendent
gunmen herded six women and principal's office in ~ schooL will review applications and
one man into the limousine,
and it pulled away, bound for a
private jet flown to Kennedy
Airport from Westchester
Airport to the north.
Several cars filled with FBI
agents followed .
A spokesman for the bank
said he assumed the gunmen
took with them some of the
CHEYENNE, Wyo. (UPI)House Speaker Carl Albert
$29,000 that constituted the Bili Kidd, a 28-year-old stock- won renomination over token
bank's entire cash reserve at iroker won Tuesday's Republi- opposition.
the time of the robbery, though can primary for Wyoming's
Edmondson polled 55 per
he did not know how much.
lone congressional seat, over cent oLthe vote in the record
One of the hostages taken to three other candidates.
field. Bartlett easily outthe airport, Joan Saunders, a
Democrats had a four-way distanced politically unknown
teller at the bank, said tbat, ba tile for the Senate nomina· C. W. Wood in the GOP
when the gunmen first entered, tion, but the contest ended in a primary.
"!thought they'd just take the lopsided victory for tavern
Both men are seeking the
money and run. " Clinging to owner Mike Vinich of Hudson, Senate seat vacated by Sen.
the arm of her father Clyde a former aide to Wyoming Fred R Harris, ~kla . Harris
Saunders, she said, "! never Democratic Rep. Teno Ronca· passed up a bid for re~lection
thought anything like this lio.
for a short and unsuccessful try
would ever happen."
Roncalio, who was unop- at the Democratic presidential
posed in the primary, will face nomination.
1,,
Kidd in the general election. Edmondson and Bartlett will
OKLAHOMA CITY (UPI)- join American Party candidate
Veteran Rep. Ed Edmondson Wiliiam G. Roach and indepen·
UNIT CALLED
swept over a record 10 op- dents Joe C. Phillips and Paul
The Pomeroy emerge ncy ponents in the Democratic E. Trent on the November
S&lt;juad was called Tuesday at Senate primary Tuesday to win ballot.
Albert laces no &gt;Republican
7:23 p. m. to the Walter King a berth opposite form er
residence in Rutland. Mr. King Republican Gov. Dewey opposition in November but Is
was ta ken to Veterans Bartlett and three other; in the challenged by independent Ha·
rold J. MarshaL
Memorial HospitaL
general election.

danger of isolationism comes catastrophic. retreat from the
not from a disengagement world.
from Indochina but "from
The Vietnam War, he said,
those who persist in a policy was "undermining the respect
the American people know to · of Olll' young people for our
be foolish and futile and costly military service" and was not
in treasure and lives. They are worth 11 one more ounce of
the ones who invite a really suffering and anguish."

.(.01111/YEAR

~IIWIC~

Pomerance admitted it was
"Very nasty ·out there"
Tuesday night when antiwar
protesters iaid siege to the
Gl)P convention ball, jeering
and otherwise harassing

Stockbroker Wins
GOP Primary Seat

He Doesn't Miss . Pentagon

dete rmine eligibility. If a
parent is dissatisfied with the
r,uling of the local official he
' make a request either
may
orally or in wriiing for a
hearing to appeal the decision.
Robert Bowen, whose ad·
dress is Mulberry Ave.,
Pomeroy, bas been designated
as the hearing official. Hearing
procedures are outlined In the
policy.
The policy also provides that
there will be no idenUfication
of, or discrimination against,
any student unable to pay the
full costs of a meaL
Acomplete copy of the policy
is on file in e~ch school district
in the office of the principal
where il may he reviewed by
all interested persons.

Ill' t . 3 J fl.
• •ltld ..... Jdld . .
more ra.lay night.
Polleem111 and demon·
straton allk• •tlclplte many
n10re arra11 tonlibt wheu a
m.tve campolgn "rll civil
disol)edlence, carefully or·
chellrated to provoke arre~~~s,

·wm be carried out.

Demonatraton hltend to
blocbdl lltreell and polllibly
hotel loblties to prev111t ~..
gates from getting to the

Conv111tloo JWI. ,
The oonfrootatlon

~Y

night wbest keyed-up demon·
stratora poWllled and damaged
cars of conventlon-tloen was
the IIIOil seiiouuo far . ~
· The drawn-out arrest
P'oce&amp;l took moat of the af.
ternoon. When it W81 over,
police had brought In 1~ &amp;Wlt
males, 38 adult females and
four juveniles-two glrlll and
two boys. Cases were
di8ml8led agaln81 seven.
Anger at the IIJTells built up
and wu wnted against the
cars of delegates moving to the
Convention Hall Tuesday
night. ~
One car, carrYing Judge and

OPEN DAILY.tO to :91-SUNDAY 1TO 7PRICES IN EFFECT NOW THROUGH SUNDAY, AUG. 27, WHILE QUANTITIES LAST
GENERAL ELECTRIC
SHOW&amp;TELL
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ment

And thai 's where it ends.
Because David Packat·d is a
conservative Republ ican who
believes dee pl y in the poli·
tical te nets of Rtc hard M.
Nixon and was hi ghly involved in our Vietnam poll·
cy. And because Martin
Stone is a li beral Democrat
who has personal politica l
aspi rations (nnli ke Packard)
and claims to be the fi rst
Californian ol any promin·
encc to attack the adminis·
trati on's Vidnam policies.

Here then are two noteworth y fig!lres whose views
reflect divergent worlds.
We go first to the starkly
modern, funct ional pl ant ol
Hewiett·Packard on Page
Mill Road in the hills west
of Palo Alto. It is an open
edifice. No partitions. No
one snoozes here. Only the
office of David Packard is
wailed off.
He is a big, solid man who
ex udes calm. He is just now
really getting back into the
electron ic p•·ecision instrument fi rm which he helped
fo und 34 years ago. For 35
months, until th is past De·
cember, he was away in
Washington as Mr. Nixon's
deputy secretary of defense.
(" I probably spent as m11ch
time in my three years
there," he says 1\'ryly, "in
meeting with Dr. qenry Kis-

perience cost him $18 mi l·
lion.
"Washington is a tou gh
league," he says, ''and it's
especially tough in a year
like thi s, with politics. And
peopl e are just plain mean.
I had no prior political experience of any kind except
that I ran for the Palo Alto
school board about 20 years
ago."
The ITT hearings 1a s t
spring dismayed him.
" Sen. Kennedy got involved strictly for pol itical
reasons," he ma int ain s.
" Sen. Prox mire, and I've
said this before, takes any
fa ct or fi gu re he can get
and quotes it , distorts it.
usually out of context, to try
and get over some point and
make headlines or get on TV.
Thoy all do it. Sen. F!il·
bright, he's one of the worst.
He's a fairly se nsible man
when yo!l see him in priva te
bu t he gets in fron t of a TV
camera and he isn't tryi ng
to do a nything for anybody
except himsel f. "
Packard, whose main work
in the Defense Depa rtment
involved technical work in
procurement, was a I s o a
major architec t, with Secretary Melvin Laird, of the
Vietnam iza tion program in
1969.
" ! am stili convinced," he
says, "the Vietnamiza tion
program was the only way
we had at that time. To have
negotiated the terminati on of
the war in the spring of
!969 would have amounted to
unconditional surrender to
the North Vietnamese and
would have had di sastrous
conseq uences in terms of our

ability to mainta in any leadership t h r o u g h o ut the
world."

Res um ption of the bombing of North Vietnam was to
him a logical response -~
"an aggression by the r-.onn
Vietnamese, clearly backed
by the Soviets, with heavy
equipment, ta nks, la rge field
singer as anyone else .")
Now Packard is chairman guns and heavy anti·airc raft
or the Republican Party's eq uipm ent n e cess a r y to
Bay Area Committee to Reelect the President.
"I have taken the job for
one simple reason," he says.

2-HOUR .
CLEA_NI_NG

" ! think it's tremend ouslr
impor tant to get the Prest·
dent back in the White
House for fo ur more years."
He has no a mbition to re·
turn to Washington himself.
He got out when he did be·
cause it WO!ild have cost him
·millions personally to re·
main in government service
in to 1972. As it was, it is 210 E. lnd
Pomeroy
e&gt;timated the Washington ex- l~....~.o.n~e·9~n~-5~4~3~....

mo un t an invasion."

turn switch c;:.nd '1prestol e It's o 2~speed phono too.
Ploys even 12" LP' s • Tougtl polystyrent! cabinet • Sol·
id ·state design . GE quality throughout .

for 20 minutes In traffic. The
driver, Kenneth A. Ander110n,
sBJd delllCXlstrators beat on the
limoullne with fists and sticks,
smashed one wlnduw and
ripped away antennas.
"'lbanl: God for the state
troopers," said ·Anderson.
"They Cllllt to our retiCUe and
Mrs . Steve (Mary) Eblin, 82, we were able to drive olf. I. ran
Rt. 4, Pomeroy, died this two of them down-! doo't
morning at the Holzer Medical' know If they were hurt.
Center.
Mrs. Eblin is survived by her
husband,
Steve
Eblin,
Pomeroy; five daughters,
Mary Spurrier, Pomeroy;
Louise West, Powhatan Point;
Edith Barton, Crystal Lake,
(Continued from Page II
Ill.; three sons, Ben Eblin,
Pomeroy; Henry Eblin, Wilmer E. Halfhill. Rlchord
Pomeroy, and Ira Eblin, Co- Karr. Rodney Ke r r, Eric
lumbus; one brother, H. H. Pear&lt; h.
Dexter - Leafy Chasteen.
Bolin , Cable , Ohio ; 39
Minersville
Claro
grandchildren , 36 great· Mcintyre, Phyllis Mcintyre.
Syracuse - Lorraine M.
grandc hildren , five great.
Cundl.
ff ,
Karen
Clark ,
great-grandchildren,
and Lawrence
S. Ebersbach,
several nieces and nephews. Milton Roush. Oris Hubbard,
Mrs. Eblin was a member of Sampson Hall .
Long Botfom - Richard
the Hiland Church. Funeral Barton.
services will be held Saturday
Rutland - Frances Nelson,
at 2p.m . at the Hiland Chlll'ch. Amos 8 . Crass, Donna
Rosella Birchfield.
The Rev. Cecil Wise will of. Davidson,
w,uston - Paul Blerhop.
ficia le. Blll'ial will be at the
Coolville - Robert L
Rock Springs Cemetery . Keaton.
Calling hours are anytime.
Hemlock Grove - Sharon
Welker.
Reedsville - Grant Smith.
Langsville - Ellis Myers,
Frank Gilkey.
Mason - Allee Zuspan.
West Columbia - David
Mattox.

$·2288

Mary Eblin of

Pomeroy Dies

Yet the mood of yo ung
thinki ng .
" ! unders ta nd young peo.
pie are against the wa r," he
says. " I' m aga inst the war :
don't li ke it any better than
they do. But th ey have bee n
fed a li ne of propaganda that
we're the aggressors where·
as the contrarv is true. We
li ve in a rea l world: we ca n' t
reform it ove rnight. I wish
we could.
" if North Vietnam was
convinced that this cou ntry
is united behind the Prest·
dent, l thi nk we wou ld have
had an acceptable negoti a·
lion today, or before now .
As long as there arc large
numbers of people in the
United S tat es , including
elected officials and ca ndidates lor hi gh office, who
are giving more support to
North Vietnam than they are
giving to their own country,
then it's going to be very
diffic ult to achieve a sati sfac tory negotiation.
"I'm sure the North Vietnamese think if McGovern is
elected, we'll just turn Southeast Asia over to them ."
Wh at did the Washi ngton
experience do for him as an
individual• ·
'
" It was a liberal
education
in learning fir sthand how

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Offiu. Hamihon hoch dtsigntd th11 popper With o spec•ol oU1omaht:

'16

buller ~i ,pems.r. All you do it place bvHe r in lid dispens.r and 01 ~eat

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VACUUM
CLEANER

of

We Democrats may be short
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of talent. Pity Mr. Nixonhis first and only choice was
Spiro Agnew.

JEWELRY
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Timely Quotes

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government operates. The " " • • •
D e f e n s e Department is •
large; I doubt it will ever
be a model of e!ficiency.
There is a great ·deal of In·
fighting on allocation of re.
sources. Then there are Con·
gressional press ures. I'm
sure we could save a billion
dollars a year if we had a
free hand in selecting the
bases and operating facilities without political influ·
6 percent per year on
ence."
David Packard is now free year Certificates
of these pressures. Life is a Deposit .
Sl
lot less hectic. Almost every Minimum. ·Interest
weekend he retreats to one
Quarterly. 90
of the three ranches he owns
interest penalty if
in the inland valleys, for
before
some hunting and 'fishing . He cashed
will be 60 in September. He I r:natt~ity.
is content that he has done
his share of civic duties .
Mei~
''I can decide now 1 ' he
says, "what I want to do
toda y or tomorrow."

people r uns counte r to his

• Ge ntle mist·pene trotes hai r fo r lost , long
las t ing sets . e To uc h ' N l ilt Hoo d - w rite ,
read or watc h T. V. wit h the hood il'l just the
rig ht poiit ion . e Re mo te c o ntro l- cha nge
hea l ~ l edioru right in yo ur han d. • Ne w de ·
~ig n - lnrreo se d air flo_..... lor fa ster d ryin g. •
Jumbo hood - o tco m modate ~ la rge ro ll en,
all ha ir ~l yles . e Ea sy-up design - se t up the
dryer in one quie t. mOti on. • 5 Po\i lion contro l- inclvding setting s for synthet ic and not·
ural wigs.

e Simple· to opei-ote , Slide- in show -film , put on '"'"d.

Mrs. Martin J. RoeSB of St.
Petersburg, Fla., '11'81 stalled

David Packard Has Done His Share
By MUKKA Y OLDERMAN
SAN F'RANCISC0-1 NEA I
- The worlds of David Packard, chairman of the board,
Hewlett- Packard Company.
and Marli n Stone, chairman
of the board , Monogram In·
d!lstt·ies , Inc .. are. on the
s11rface, quite simila r.
Both are emi nently suc.
cess ful industri alists.
Both, altho ugh born uul·
side the state of Califo rni a,
were educated there and ex·
emplify its career types.
Both had vigo•·ous athletic
backgrounds.
Both have disting uished
records of public involve·

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10- The Dally Sentinel, Mlddleport·POOlii'OY, 0., Augllll23, 111'12

C.t II

.Confrontation Possible Tonight in·Miami
MIAMI BEACH (UP! )-!Je..
monstrators rallied thejr
forces today for an attempt to
confront President Nixon with
a ball-empty hall when he
delivers his acceptance speech

at the Republican National
convention.
MiBml Beach Police Chief
Rocky Pomerance said be
hoped he would not have to call
upon 3,000 Florida National

Guardsmen and 2,500 federal
troops bein~ held in reserve in
case the disorders are too
much for regular law en·
forcement officers to control at
the final session of the. GOP

convention tonight.
. "We expect s0me more
testing," the police chief said.
"I hope we can do it with ow
civilian police. But I just don 't
know.''

McGovern
Exp]ains
Military
Stand
.
'

CHICAGO (lJt&gt;i ) - Sen.
George McGovern told the
American Legion today that
l)ls proposed,$20 biUlon cut In
Ute defense budget still would
leave the United States strong
enough to resist any threat.
In the first major address of
his campaign, the Democratic
nominee defended his demands
for steep cutbacks in defense
expenditures and total disen·
gagement from the Vietnam
War. He contended the real
danger to national security had
come from '1he men who used
0111' military power for pill'·
poseS Olll' people have rejec.
ted."

McGovern's prepared address to the Legion came at the
midpoint of a swing across the
country to build bridges to
organizations and individuals
who have been hostile to his
candidacy.
He met with former President Lyndon Johnson Tuesday
in Texas, scheduled a recon·
clllation meeting with Chicago
Mayor Richard Daley today
and will speak to the Veterans
of Foreign Wars Thursday.
"No foreign country will
push us around," McGovern
said, in contending his
jrOposed $20 billion cut from
the defense budget would leave
enough fire power to destroy
both Russia and China 20 times
over.
"We wlli have sufficient
power to resist attack, the
threat of attack, or the
diplomacy of blaclimail," he
said.
"I have devoted more time
and effort to my defense
postlll'e~ than to any othe•· part

.

Dale Swift
Died Today
Dale Calvin Swift, 47, of 163
Front Street , Middleport,
sports equipment manager for
Meigs High School in recent
years and ajso for Athens High
School earlier, passed away at
his residence this morning, ·
Swift was born September 13,
1924 , in Athens. He was
preceded in death by his
father, Ervie Swift. His
mother, Mrs. Hattie Semons
Swift, resides in 'Middleport.
He is survived also by a
brother, Deana Swift, and two
sisters, Mrs. Arthur (Mary )
Clark, New Albany ,-and Mrs.
Dwight (Martha) Gaskell,
Cuyahoga Falls, and several
aunts, uncles, nieces, nephews
and cousins.

Mr. Swift attended the
Middleport Chlll'ch of Christ.
He was a favorite of the
students at Meigs Marauder
basketball games.
Funeral services will be held
at 2 p. m. Friday at the
Rawlings-Coates
Funeral
Home in Middleport. The
minister will be the Rev. Rollin
Moyer. Burial will be at the
Hebbardsville Cemetery in
Athens. Calling hours are
Thursday 2-4 p.m. and 7-9 p. m.

ERROR CORRECTED
In the account oj the accident
•involving Ralph Harvey,
Pomeroy, it stated that Harvey
wen t off the road on the rtghl.
This was in error as Harvey
struck a fence to av oid a
collision wi th a parked car.

of my preparation lor the
presidency. I have made a
careful calculation of the
security needs of the country.
There is not a single possibility
that is not provided for, and

then some."
McGovern said the real

NEW YORK (UPI)-A bi·
zarre drama which began as a
bank robbery ended today
when an FBI agent shot and
killed one of two gunmen as
they and their seven hostages
met a wailing plane at Kennedy Airport.
~~The other gunman, a ho·
mosexual who at one point
demanded a reunion with his
unwilling former male lover,
surrendered . The hostages
were released unharmed.
An FBI agent who drove the
bandits and their hostages to
Kennedy Airport shot the
gunman in the chest.
During the 15'h holll' drama,
the homosexual threatened to
shoot the hostages because, he
said, Supreme Court decialons
made him immune from the
electric chair and two of the
original nine hostage bank
employes were released.
The gunman was shot just as
the plane was taxiing to a stop
beside the limousine which
brought the bandits and their
hostages to a remote airstrip at
Kennedy Airport, Assistant
FBI Director John F. Malone
said.
The gunmen were about to
board the plane when the agent
received "a silent signal" to
shoot, Malone added.
Drama Begins
The drama began when the
two gunmen, one reportedly

Moto-Cross
To ·Benefit
E-R Squad
The Meigs Motorcycle Club
will sponsor a Moto-Cross
Sur day, Aug. 27, for the benefit
of the Pomeroy emergency
squad.
The event will be held at the
club grounds located five miles
north of Pomeroy on U. S. 33.
Practice will be from 10 to 12
wi th races to begin at t p. m.
Refreshments will be available
at the club house.
·'
Trophies to be awarded in ail
classes are being donated by
Pomeroy merchants. Riders'
points will accumulate toward
a high point trophy to be
awarded at the last event.
Businesses donating trophies
are Blue and Grey Restaurant,
Fraternal Order of Eagles,
Karr and VanZa ndt, Jack's
Ashland, Hartley Shoes, K and
C Jewelers, Fabric Sh op,
Pomeroy Bowlin g Lanes,
P(\ITieroy Ben . Franklin ,
Swisher and Lohse , lola's, New
York Clothing House, Sears
Store, Farmers
Bank,
Pomeroy Nati onal Bank ,
Athens Cow1 ty Savings and
Loan, Economy Loan, City
Loan, Robinson Cleaners, Bill
and Lee's Music Center and
Power Constructors Inc.

carrying a pistol and the other
a shotgun, entered a branch of
the Chase Manhattan bank in
Brooklyn shortly before closing
time at 3 p.m. EDT Tuesday.
It started moving toward an
end when, at the insistence of
the gunmen who negotiated
with poliCe for almost 13 holll's,
an airport limousine pulled up
to the bank at about 4 a.m.

Hatchet

Slaying
Probed
IRONTON, Ohio (UP!) Lawrence County authorities
today said they are continuing
an investigation into the batch·
et slaying of William Scarber·
ry, 36, of nearby ·Possum Hoi·
low.
The office of Lawrence County Sheriff James H. Howell
said Scarberry's 13 year old
son was taken into custody,
questioned and later released
into the custody of an uncle
pending an appearance in Juvenile Court.
Juvenile Court Judge Roy
Henry said the exact time of
the appearance had not yet
been determined,
The sheriff's office said it
was notified by a neighbor at
about 5:50 p.m. Monday that
Scarberry had been involved in
an accident.
Howell said when he arrived
the victim had apparently been
removed from the house to the
front yard where he found the
body .
Scarberry was taken by am·
bulance to Lawrence County
General Hos pi tal and was
pronounced dead on arrival,
Howell said.
Howell said Scarberry was
apparently struck with the
sharp edge of a handaxe over
the left ear .
County Prosecutor William
Kennedy said the investigation
into the killing was incomplete.
He also said the exact location
of the incident inside the house
had not yet been verified,
although he said it was
believed to have occurred in
the kitchen .

fOday' S FUNNY
HOTHEADS Lost
lHEIRCWL

Todar's FUNNY· will pay $1 ,00 lor
.och origlnol "funny N11stcf. Send fCitl
to: Todc.r's FUNNY, 1200 Wett Third
St., Cleveland, Ohio 4.4113.

rt• ..........
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~

MEIGS COUNTY'S TIR.ECENTER

Say
"Get Well Please"
With A

FOLIAGE GARDEN
Greenhouse Fresh
From

RIZER OIL CO.
Pomeroy, 0.

•3,00

Dudley's Florist
59 N. Second St.
Middleport, 0.

992-5"0

looting a beer truCk and a
liquor atore.
·
Police made 210 arre.ts.
Slate troopers, aNI•ed by
marine patrol officers,
arrested 206 per110ns near the

Free Meal Policy Announced
.
The Eastern Local Board of
E:duca lion today announced a
free meal policy for Eastern
Local School children unable to
pay the price of a meaL
Loca I school officials have
adopted the following family
size and income scale to assist
them in determining eligibility .
· Families falling within this
scale, or those suffering

'

FBI Ends Drama

fOIIt OJIM.J7Y FEATURES•••
I

E. Mllln St.

delegates and tying Ull tra(fic.
Earlier demonstraiOI's had
roamed through the streets of
.this resort city, smash,ing
windows, cursing pedestrians,
pounding on passing cars, and

Applications may be submitted
any lime during the school
year.
The form itself is simple to
complete , and asks only Information needed to determine
the num ber of children in
school and any unusual cir·
cums tances or hardships
which affec t the family's
ability to pay for school lun·
unus ual circumstances or ches. Information provided· on
hardships may apply for free the application will be conmeals for their children. They fidential and will be used only
may do so by filling in the for the purpose of determining
applica tion forms sent home in eligibility.
EDT today. Leaving behind a letter to parents. Additional
Under the provisions of the
one woman hostage , the ·copies are avilabie at the policy the local superintendent
gunmen herded six women and principal's office in ~ schooL will review applications and
one man into the limousine,
and it pulled away, bound for a
private jet flown to Kennedy
Airport from Westchester
Airport to the north.
Several cars filled with FBI
agents followed .
A spokesman for the bank
said he assumed the gunmen
took with them some of the
CHEYENNE, Wyo. (UPI)House Speaker Carl Albert
$29,000 that constituted the Bili Kidd, a 28-year-old stock- won renomination over token
bank's entire cash reserve at iroker won Tuesday's Republi- opposition.
the time of the robbery, though can primary for Wyoming's
Edmondson polled 55 per
he did not know how much.
lone congressional seat, over cent oLthe vote in the record
One of the hostages taken to three other candidates.
field. Bartlett easily outthe airport, Joan Saunders, a
Democrats had a four-way distanced politically unknown
teller at the bank, said tbat, ba tile for the Senate nomina· C. W. Wood in the GOP
when the gunmen first entered, tion, but the contest ended in a primary.
"!thought they'd just take the lopsided victory for tavern
Both men are seeking the
money and run. " Clinging to owner Mike Vinich of Hudson, Senate seat vacated by Sen.
the arm of her father Clyde a former aide to Wyoming Fred R Harris, ~kla . Harris
Saunders, she said, "! never Democratic Rep. Teno Ronca· passed up a bid for re~lection
thought anything like this lio.
for a short and unsuccessful try
would ever happen."
Roncalio, who was unop- at the Democratic presidential
posed in the primary, will face nomination.
1,,
Kidd in the general election. Edmondson and Bartlett will
OKLAHOMA CITY (UPI)- join American Party candidate
Veteran Rep. Ed Edmondson Wiliiam G. Roach and indepen·
UNIT CALLED
swept over a record 10 op- dents Joe C. Phillips and Paul
The Pomeroy emerge ncy ponents in the Democratic E. Trent on the November
S&lt;juad was called Tuesday at Senate primary Tuesday to win ballot.
Albert laces no &gt;Republican
7:23 p. m. to the Walter King a berth opposite form er
residence in Rutland. Mr. King Republican Gov. Dewey opposition in November but Is
was ta ken to Veterans Bartlett and three other; in the challenged by independent Ha·
rold J. MarshaL
Memorial HospitaL
general election.

danger of isolationism comes catastrophic. retreat from the
not from a disengagement world.
from Indochina but "from
The Vietnam War, he said,
those who persist in a policy was "undermining the respect
the American people know to · of Olll' young people for our
be foolish and futile and costly military service" and was not
in treasure and lives. They are worth 11 one more ounce of
the ones who invite a really suffering and anguish."

.(.01111/YEAR

~IIWIC~

Pomerance admitted it was
"Very nasty ·out there"
Tuesday night when antiwar
protesters iaid siege to the
Gl)P convention ball, jeering
and otherwise harassing

Stockbroker Wins
GOP Primary Seat

He Doesn't Miss . Pentagon

dete rmine eligibility. If a
parent is dissatisfied with the
r,uling of the local official he
' make a request either
may
orally or in wriiing for a
hearing to appeal the decision.
Robert Bowen, whose ad·
dress is Mulberry Ave.,
Pomeroy, bas been designated
as the hearing official. Hearing
procedures are outlined In the
policy.
The policy also provides that
there will be no idenUfication
of, or discrimination against,
any student unable to pay the
full costs of a meaL
Acomplete copy of the policy
is on file in e~ch school district
in the office of the principal
where il may he reviewed by
all interested persons.

Ill' t . 3 J fl.
• •ltld ..... Jdld . .
more ra.lay night.
Polleem111 and demon·
straton allk• •tlclplte many
n10re arra11 tonlibt wheu a
m.tve campolgn "rll civil
disol)edlence, carefully or·
chellrated to provoke arre~~~s,

·wm be carried out.

Demonatraton hltend to
blocbdl lltreell and polllibly
hotel loblties to prev111t ~..
gates from getting to the

Conv111tloo JWI. ,
The oonfrootatlon

~Y

night wbest keyed-up demon·
stratora poWllled and damaged
cars of conventlon-tloen was
the IIIOil seiiouuo far . ~
· The drawn-out arrest
P'oce&amp;l took moat of the af.
ternoon. When it W81 over,
police had brought In 1~ &amp;Wlt
males, 38 adult females and
four juveniles-two glrlll and
two boys. Cases were
di8ml8led agaln81 seven.
Anger at the IIJTells built up
and wu wnted against the
cars of delegates moving to the
Convention Hall Tuesday
night. ~
One car, carrYing Judge and

OPEN DAILY.tO to :91-SUNDAY 1TO 7PRICES IN EFFECT NOW THROUGH SUNDAY, AUG. 27, WHILE QUANTITIES LAST
GENERAL ELECTRIC
SHOW&amp;TELL
PHONOGRAPH

ment

And thai 's where it ends.
Because David Packat·d is a
conservative Republ ican who
believes dee pl y in the poli·
tical te nets of Rtc hard M.
Nixon and was hi ghly involved in our Vietnam poll·
cy. And because Martin
Stone is a li beral Democrat
who has personal politica l
aspi rations (nnli ke Packard)
and claims to be the fi rst
Californian ol any promin·
encc to attack the adminis·
trati on's Vidnam policies.

Here then are two noteworth y fig!lres whose views
reflect divergent worlds.
We go first to the starkly
modern, funct ional pl ant ol
Hewiett·Packard on Page
Mill Road in the hills west
of Palo Alto. It is an open
edifice. No partitions. No
one snoozes here. Only the
office of David Packard is
wailed off.
He is a big, solid man who
ex udes calm. He is just now
really getting back into the
electron ic p•·ecision instrument fi rm which he helped
fo und 34 years ago. For 35
months, until th is past De·
cember, he was away in
Washington as Mr. Nixon's
deputy secretary of defense.
(" I probably spent as m11ch
time in my three years
there," he says 1\'ryly, "in
meeting with Dr. qenry Kis-

perience cost him $18 mi l·
lion.
"Washington is a tou gh
league," he says, ''and it's
especially tough in a year
like thi s, with politics. And
peopl e are just plain mean.
I had no prior political experience of any kind except
that I ran for the Palo Alto
school board about 20 years
ago."
The ITT hearings 1a s t
spring dismayed him.
" Sen. Kennedy got involved strictly for pol itical
reasons," he ma int ain s.
" Sen. Prox mire, and I've
said this before, takes any
fa ct or fi gu re he can get
and quotes it , distorts it.
usually out of context, to try
and get over some point and
make headlines or get on TV.
Thoy all do it. Sen. F!il·
bright, he's one of the worst.
He's a fairly se nsible man
when yo!l see him in priva te
bu t he gets in fron t of a TV
camera and he isn't tryi ng
to do a nything for anybody
except himsel f. "
Packard, whose main work
in the Defense Depa rtment
involved technical work in
procurement, was a I s o a
major architec t, with Secretary Melvin Laird, of the
Vietnam iza tion program in
1969.
" ! am stili convinced," he
says, "the Vietnamiza tion
program was the only way
we had at that time. To have
negotiated the terminati on of
the war in the spring of
!969 would have amounted to
unconditional surrender to
the North Vietnamese and
would have had di sastrous
conseq uences in terms of our

ability to mainta in any leadership t h r o u g h o ut the
world."

Res um ption of the bombing of North Vietnam was to
him a logical response -~
"an aggression by the r-.onn
Vietnamese, clearly backed
by the Soviets, with heavy
equipment, ta nks, la rge field
singer as anyone else .")
Now Packard is chairman guns and heavy anti·airc raft
or the Republican Party's eq uipm ent n e cess a r y to
Bay Area Committee to Reelect the President.
"I have taken the job for
one simple reason," he says.

2-HOUR .
CLEA_NI_NG

" ! think it's tremend ouslr
impor tant to get the Prest·
dent back in the White
House for fo ur more years."
He has no a mbition to re·
turn to Washington himself.
He got out when he did be·
cause it WO!ild have cost him
·millions personally to re·
main in government service
in to 1972. As it was, it is 210 E. lnd
Pomeroy
e&gt;timated the Washington ex- l~....~.o.n~e·9~n~-5~4~3~....

mo un t an invasion."

turn switch c;:.nd '1prestol e It's o 2~speed phono too.
Ploys even 12" LP' s • Tougtl polystyrent! cabinet • Sol·
id ·state design . GE quality throughout .

for 20 minutes In traffic. The
driver, Kenneth A. Ander110n,
sBJd delllCXlstrators beat on the
limoullne with fists and sticks,
smashed one wlnduw and
ripped away antennas.
"'lbanl: God for the state
troopers," said ·Anderson.
"They Cllllt to our retiCUe and
Mrs . Steve (Mary) Eblin, 82, we were able to drive olf. I. ran
Rt. 4, Pomeroy, died this two of them down-! doo't
morning at the Holzer Medical' know If they were hurt.
Center.
Mrs. Eblin is survived by her
husband,
Steve
Eblin,
Pomeroy; five daughters,
Mary Spurrier, Pomeroy;
Louise West, Powhatan Point;
Edith Barton, Crystal Lake,
(Continued from Page II
Ill.; three sons, Ben Eblin,
Pomeroy; Henry Eblin, Wilmer E. Halfhill. Rlchord
Pomeroy, and Ira Eblin, Co- Karr. Rodney Ke r r, Eric
lumbus; one brother, H. H. Pear&lt; h.
Dexter - Leafy Chasteen.
Bolin , Cable , Ohio ; 39
Minersville
Claro
grandchildren , 36 great· Mcintyre, Phyllis Mcintyre.
Syracuse - Lorraine M.
grandc hildren , five great.
Cundl.
ff ,
Karen
Clark ,
great-grandchildren,
and Lawrence
S. Ebersbach,
several nieces and nephews. Milton Roush. Oris Hubbard,
Mrs. Eblin was a member of Sampson Hall .
Long Botfom - Richard
the Hiland Church. Funeral Barton.
services will be held Saturday
Rutland - Frances Nelson,
at 2p.m . at the Hiland Chlll'ch. Amos 8 . Crass, Donna
Rosella Birchfield.
The Rev. Cecil Wise will of. Davidson,
w,uston - Paul Blerhop.
ficia le. Blll'ial will be at the
Coolville - Robert L
Rock Springs Cemetery . Keaton.
Calling hours are anytime.
Hemlock Grove - Sharon
Welker.
Reedsville - Grant Smith.
Langsville - Ellis Myers,
Frank Gilkey.
Mason - Allee Zuspan.
West Columbia - David
Mattox.

$·2288

Mary Eblin of

Pomeroy Dies

Yet the mood of yo ung
thinki ng .
" ! unders ta nd young peo.
pie are against the wa r," he
says. " I' m aga inst the war :
don't li ke it any better than
they do. But th ey have bee n
fed a li ne of propaganda that
we're the aggressors where·
as the contrarv is true. We
li ve in a rea l world: we ca n' t
reform it ove rnight. I wish
we could.
" if North Vietnam was
convinced that this cou ntry
is united behind the Prest·
dent, l thi nk we wou ld have
had an acceptable negoti a·
lion today, or before now .
As long as there arc large
numbers of people in the
United S tat es , including
elected officials and ca ndidates lor hi gh office, who
are giving more support to
North Vietnam than they are
giving to their own country,
then it's going to be very
diffic ult to achieve a sati sfac tory negotiation.
"I'm sure the North Vietnamese think if McGovern is
elected, we'll just turn Southeast Asia over to them ."
Wh at did the Washi ngton
experience do for him as an
individual• ·
'
" It was a liberal
education
in learning fir sthand how

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HECI(·s lUG

JEWELRY DEPT.

(lo4) 63 lb.
.
lb.

99

HECK'S
.REG.

6·7

$18.96

HECK'S lEG.

106)5
,

$34 88

HECI(•s REG

$13.96 .
IIWFIIY DFPT,

POPCORN POPPER

Freezer

Seh your hoir with mi~l ...wit h con d itian in er ... o r sets it dry
io m1 nu1es . 20 1ong le·free ro ll en to OY()id t o n gl~s and tnarls .
.. 6 iu mbo, 10 mediu m, 4 ~moll rollers. Hea t comfort co ntr ol
r eg ulat e~ ro ll er hea l ... al l rollers hea t at tome time . loter ( hangeo b le ~ ignol s when rollers o re hea ted. 6 oz. bo lt le of
Ha ir Condit ioner

Adjvsts
desired sh d o all kinds of b
tray for e~s e of browness . Sn~ead. Toons to
Qentt)' handy cleaning . Cush ' Pdown cru mb
linish . Stoy ' lol asr to yo.., _ G/ •on~.d Poost /ifp
coo hand/
eom,.,g ch

HAMILTON BEACH

For
The

HAIRSEnER

SUIVBE4A1

Peak cleaning power ! Makes
cleaning easy! Extra power for
e11.tro suction ! Makes di rt and
du st di sappear! A po sit ion
carpet od iustment for oil types

Co. Branch

- Sargent Shriver.

G. E. MIST

VACUUM
CLEANER

of

We Democrats may be short
of money. We're not short
of talent. Pity Mr. Nixonhis first and only choice was
Spiro Agnew.

JEWELRY
DEPT.

UPRIGHT

On

I'm not embarrassed to be

$33.96

GENERAL ELECTRIC .

INJfR.EST

Geor ~ e McGovern's seventh
c h o 1 c e for vice pt:esident.

$27.96

HECK'S REG.

JEWELRY DEPT.

Blood

Timely Quotes

s'

___.- -· HECK'S REG.

government operates. The " " • • •
D e f e n s e Department is •
large; I doubt it will ever
be a model of e!ficiency.
There is a great ·deal of In·
fighting on allocation of re.
sources. Then there are Con·
gressional press ures. I'm
sure we could save a billion
dollars a year if we had a
free hand in selecting the
bases and operating facilities without political influ·
6 percent per year on
ence."
David Packard is now free year Certificates
of these pressures. Life is a Deposit .
Sl
lot less hectic. Almost every Minimum. ·Interest
weekend he retreats to one
Quarterly. 90
of the three ranches he owns
interest penalty if
in the inland valleys, for
before
some hunting and 'fishing . He cashed
will be 60 in September. He I r:natt~ity.
is content that he has done
his share of civic duties .
Mei~
''I can decide now 1 ' he
says, "what I want to do
toda y or tomorrow."

people r uns counte r to his

• Ge ntle mist·pene trotes hai r fo r lost , long
las t ing sets . e To uc h ' N l ilt Hoo d - w rite ,
read or watc h T. V. wit h the hood il'l just the
rig ht poiit ion . e Re mo te c o ntro l- cha nge
hea l ~ l edioru right in yo ur han d. • Ne w de ·
~ig n - lnrreo se d air flo_..... lor fa ster d ryin g. •
Jumbo hood - o tco m modate ~ la rge ro ll en,
all ha ir ~l yles . e Ea sy-up design - se t up the
dryer in one quie t. mOti on. • 5 Po\i lion contro l- inclvding setting s for synthet ic and not·
ural wigs.

e Simple· to opei-ote , Slide- in show -film , put on '"'"d.

Mrs. Martin J. RoeSB of St.
Petersburg, Fla., '11'81 stalled

David Packard Has Done His Share
By MUKKA Y OLDERMAN
SAN F'RANCISC0-1 NEA I
- The worlds of David Packard, chairman of the board,
Hewlett- Packard Company.
and Marli n Stone, chairman
of the board , Monogram In·
d!lstt·ies , Inc .. are. on the
s11rface, quite simila r.
Both are emi nently suc.
cess ful industri alists.
Both, altho ugh born uul·
side the state of Califo rni a,
were educated there and ex·
emplify its career types.
Both had vigo•·ous athletic
backgrounds.
Both have disting uished
records of public involve·

G. E. PRO STYLE
MIST HAIR DRYER

lb.
D BEEF .
4 lb. PORK CHOPS
3 lb. ROUND STEAK
5 lb. CHUCK ROAST
5 lb._ BULK SAUSAGE

$14.96

JErllU1

Pl Pleasant Sbe On~

liN.

(Upon Request)

ROBINSON'S
CLEANERS·

.,.

I

I

�'. .

.

. ..

~'

...

,_

.

'

.

.- ..

'

...

;

'

'

...

.

~-

-,..

....

~.......

.

. .. .·.

~

.

. ...

...

..

~

.

•·

.

..

.

'

.......,

OfllllliLY·
10 TO 9 ·

.
· Mounds. of cruShed
ice ,' .. fast qs you con say "I ce· 0 ·
Motic"! lift hopper- motor whir·NS into action . No
Puttons to push, no swi tch ~o turn . Stainless steel
blades. PUII ·out ice drawer. Non-mar feet. UL.

Low toll, yet givu the- " be~i seal in the ho u~" · feelin g to ~lereo fM
broadcast, •retord or tope . Vou sit "relaxed , isolated fr_o~ all ext~rnol
sources of distraction, surround.e d by only the mo~n1f1tent .'\u'Jt ,of
your "favorite record~ (H stereo FM. No motrer whe re you 111, you re
0 ;, the perfe~t spot ta heor excellently separoted stereo. lig~tweight
eorpie~es ond soft foam plastic i'~tmu!f~ in~rtO$e ,ro.ur l!•lenln.'ll com•
fort , lets you enjoy lon~ houn Qf l!stenmg W!lhoull,rntol!on.
. ,

JEWElRY DEPT.

.,.,

37-003

HECK'S REG.
$14.96

HECK'S REG.
$22.96

JEWELIY
DEPT.

POLAROID .

GENERAL ELECTRIC

HEATING PAD

FLASH BULBS

COLOR PAK FILM

ALARM CLOCK

Used for the Polaroid Folding Pak Comera.

.r·~
\A
·;.

I

.

s

'5.59
JEWELRY DEPT.

Sizes to· fit most cors.

JEWElRY
DEPT.

JEWElRY
.DEPT.

REWIRING KIT
Universal Hypolon ignition cable ~ets ... complete rewiring kit for 8 cylinder engines.

. 1 ..

HECK'S REG. $5.66

HECK'S REG.

AUTOMOIIIIE DEPT.

3000 lb . capacity. 52" folding han&lt;lte.

,0

. .. , .

. .. . .

.~~f~~~:

$549

HAIDWA/11 IIEPT.

AUTOMOTIVE DEPT.

A heovy d uty home ~hop vhe lor the profes!io nol croh smo n. Re·
plo &lt;e oblc ~Ho led ~teelto p jaw\ , rep loceoble pipe jaws, Iorge on • il.
~wi~cl bo~e ond lo rmin g ho rn

8-PIE CE KIT include~ Weller Model 8100 duol heat )Oidering gun.
Th ree copper soldering li ps, tips changing wr~n ch, fl u11. brl!sh, solder·
ing aid loo l, coil of 60/ -40 ro~in ~ore 1o lder - o ll conroined in a slur ·
dy , plastic corrying CO \e. Also included it a comprehl!n~1ve, illu~ltot ·
ed " Soldering Tip1 " manual of procticol soldering procedure~.

STOP &amp; TAIL
LIGHT BULBS

HARDWARE DEPT.

$8.99
HARDWARE DEPT.

TWIN PACK

WHITE ONLY

99•

AUIOMDnVE DEPT.

77•

$3.99

HARDWA/11 DEPT.

.

PRIZE PENN

62&lt;

HECK'S
REG.

HECK'S
REG.

.HOSE NOZZLE

GAUGE

99'

AUTOMOIII/E
DEPT.

HECK'S REG.

TO $2.31

AITOIIDTirE IIEPT.

FliSEES

JACK STAND
Extro strong, .nuo safe. This Jack Stand is
the ultimate in io lety and tmurance, II
hos been thoroughly load tested in o Job·
orato r y and 9ppraved to a ~ . 000 lb.
copodty.

·-

$1.44

HARDWARE DEPT.

2 FOR

MASKING TAPE
lf4"x60 YARDS

HECK'S REG. 99'

"·

HECK'S REG. 99'

AUTOMOTII/E DEPT.

....• •

HECK'S REG.

$1.39

$1.00
, AUTOMOTIVE
DE,T.

AUTOMOnVE DEPT.

AUTOMOniiE DEPT.

HEAVY DUTY

f l'

INNER TUBES

TIRE GAUGE

.

DUPONT

RALLY CREAM WAX

Sizes to fit most cars.

s

. S 99
HECK'S REG.

HECK'S REG.

$3.48

99'

AUTOMOIII/E DEPT.

00

HECK'SREG.

$1.48

AUIOMOIIIIE
DUT.

.SNACK TRAY

.,00
HECK'S REG. s1.66
.
'

.Pl .Pleasant. S~ 0~~

HECK'S REG.

48'

$5.48

ADJUSTABLE

WRENCH SET

$ 48

$

"' ·~ s ·

...

:··- ..,. .

lr:l i l~·r l'op f.o~tiu~
1}1 11o - •ll.• • " O:

WIT" flttl

HARDWARE DEPT.

... uuun : 1 111~

19 PC. RATCHET

SOCKET SET
$ 99

Cadium Plated -e ight 12
point sockets 'h drive, 7/ 16",
~~~. 9/ 16' 1 , %", 11 / 16", ~".
15/ 16". One each of l handle ,
driver bit, ratchet handle Plus
Lhandle with 7 hex sockets , '/,.
" dr ive .

$1.99

NAI/IJWARE DEPT.

OVER THE HUMP .

ROOF COATING

HECK'S
REG.

. ..

lOOZ.

PIPE WRENCH

ROYAL .

26"
HECK'$ REG.

MOBILE HOME

3-PIECE

10!NCH

eN~ Pins , No Hooks. ,. Will fit any car. • Bott~m
"Grabs" FloQr, •• STAYS IN PLACE. e Makes for
clean highways . , .'Keep American B.autiful.

HECK'S REG.
$3.99 EACH

DEPT.

HECK'S REG.

HARDWAIIE DEPT.
'

$500

-

HAIIIIWAIIE

HARDWARE DEPT.

($;
. I

FESCO

LITTER BASKET

$17.66

59'

CHARCOAL

HARDWA/11 DEPT.

BAnERYPOST
. &amp;TERMINAL BRUSH
CLEANER

HECK'S KUi.•

HECK'S REG.

GALLON

$16:....

HECK'S -.
REG.

Unequalled perfo rman ce in an economy onienna se ·
ries! The Co lo r Ma ster difference shows in co lor and
block and white . Ruggedl y bui lt to se rve for year s to
co me, the Color Maste r Series ha s unique feolures to
boost ga in where it's mo st needed for pea k reception
on all chonnek

7" PAN &amp;ROLLER SET

HECK'S REG.

HD OR REGULAR
6 PACK OF QUARTS

3-PACK

U l l n l ~ol

7" ROLLER REFILLS T.V. ANTENNA

TOILET
SEAT

66~.

1 5 BLADE.FEElER

$ 66

AUTOMOIII/E DEPT.

;

·

HECK'S REG.

$8.99

HARDWARE
DEPT.

$10.99

Hosemaster supreme noule fo r Homes, Gardens. Cor
Owners , Service Stations, Go rage and Industry .

$6.99

5-. on ~· « •

MAGNOLIA

·Sizes to fil most cars .

AUTOMOTIVE
DEPT.

. .

.~&amp;r;;-~

Heovy gauge steel construct ion press fit desi g_n f o~ removi~g
filter cop without adjustment . Can be used wtth slt de bar tn ·
eluded or with any ratchet wren ch .

$1.18

l ii[IIMf C.U.O.H, NI I !

"'' '"' Po• I'' "P""~ '""~ ' '' · "''hall lh~

won!ed '"'"' "'"" P~ "" ' Flam1 pro
pnne }cl lo rth " ' ' ~ &lt;olod !..,.,. burn~r
"' " ' · l u•l ( ~lu&lt;d o • . "'~' ' log Mo• . blow
Io rc h h•ud , "'"' '"" I' o•• ell llnmo
IP&lt;O Pdt&lt; ond &gt;old . ,., ~ '•1'. pg t ke d '"
'" cc odu I IHI "''""''1.11 lcul '~•II .
Com p lo •o w"h &lt;loy r,. 0 ,, t ! ol!oo wl.. , h
yumth oguif. ,, ·~ ' I'" ' " ' ~' &lt; l o~;~·n~ rh.

HECK'S REG.

59'

$3.99

OIL FILTER WRENCH

HECK'S REG.

BERNZ-0-MATIC
KIT
JT-25

HECK'S
REG.

HECK'S ~EG.

HECK'S REG.
'!&lt;'

hom rh e

HECK'S REG. $7.99

HARDWARE
DEPT.

SOLDERING GUN KIT 31/2'' SHOP VISE

&gt;

muflle r ~

1o0i t h br i9h t slr1king co lo r\ i n o
mod de s•yn . Avoi lohle fo r m o ~ l
Ameri cort m u ~es o f ca rs

WELLER

MOTOR OIL

66

HECK'S REG.
TO $2.99

HECK'S
REG.

Fint quolily

moker 5 ol Lee Oil Fihen_ Poin ted

$6.68

$7.68

HAVOLINE 10W40

PACKAGE Of TWO

PACKAGE OF 8

SCISSORS JACK

....... •

HECK'S REG.

JEWElRY DEI'T.

IGNITION SET

AUTOMO TillE DEPT.

o•MOO

TICiER MUFFLERS
$588

$5.19

IGNITION

AUTOMOI!IIE DEPT.

1'1't:·

HECK'S REG.

CASCO

HECK'S REG. $1.48

J,('(

HIGH PERFORMANCE

ood ou

$1.68

Includes points, rotor and con denser
e Hi · performance not included .

S

108

$4.19

e For most cars e

WALL PAINT

I Skip the stirring, t~i n11ing, priming; be st of all , , 1kip ihe "o rdi ·
nary p oi r~t " dripping • Skip lro uble,ome cledn ·up . . . tools come
dean in ju~t so ap and water • Skip the i ncon~en ien ce . : . d ries 'in
only j o mi nut es • Choose from o wide ronge of new c~lors in gallon s
a nd quarts .
· ··-· ~. . _. _

GALLON
1

House Paint ,

AUTOMOTIVE DEPT.

REBUILT
SPARK PLUGS

• Slip prim ing on most bare woods- it ho~ ils own primer I Sl.ip frl!·
quent repainting- now it lasts even longer than befo re • 5kip woiting
lo r second coah - it dries in only on hour • S~ip leng ttl y de a n -u p
time - tool' come cleon in jut! soap ond water • W1de range o! co lors,
plus white , in quorh ond gollons

GALLON

liMIT 5 QTS.

HECK'S REG •

HECK'S REG.

HECK'S REG.

most populor con. Meet or exceed spec ifications
for origina l equipm!!nt shock oblorben on new
cars. Guaranteed far the life of t~e cor.

88

M-3

.

HOUSE PAINT

f Z· RIDE , double act ion thock obsorben to lit

Point Pleasant Store On~

· . HWSIY (aPT.

LUCilE

'

SYLVANIA
ONE DOZEN FlASHES PER PACKAGE.

SHOCK
ABSORBERS·

O

GENERAL ELECTRIC
1 year guarantee . 3 positive heat
se tt ings, wetproof pla sti c joe ket.
__..__ P•55
Removable washab le cover .
,_...___.:~....,

LUCilE

E-Z-IUDE

$1}99

$14.96

$15.96

PRICES IN EFFECT NOW THROUGH SUNDAY, AUG. 27, WHILE QUANTITIES LAST

eti I Li~ht wtlg ht for
portable mix ing I
Fingertip control I
· Automatic btottr rt ·
ltaJt.

HECK'S
REG.

HECK'S REG.

'

· • 11 position switch I
10 sp..ds , I Twin
p.owerfvl chrome beat,

· 810-R

..

OPIUAILY
10 TO 9

10 TO 9

PRICES IN EFFECT THROUGH SUNDAY, AUG. 27, WHILE QUANTITIES LAST
VANWYCK
GENERAL ELECTRIC ·
IVAL
STEREO HEADSET
HAND MIXER
CHORD
.
10-SPEED
ICE CRUSHER
.

AUTOMOTIIIE
DEPT.

. .. . ..

,_

FOAM BY·THE-FOOT
18" •••••• 22c FT.
1 ~, X18".••••••• Jsc FT.
2, )( 18" ....... 79FT.

HECK'S REG, $2.90

HECK'S REG. $4.66

HECK'S REG.

HARDWARE DEPT.

HARDWARE DE,T.

HARDWARE DEPT.

16 oz.

·cLEARANCE

LIQUI·DGOLD

ll
12 " X

'

HAIIIWARI
IJUT.

Liquid Gold . as seen on T.V., for wood pone II·
ing and wood cabinets.

IIDORAMIER

$2.72

SAWHORSE
BRACKETS

These brodets or" sold two

bra ckels to a bo x. They are

'

CHOICE
OF STYLES

77(

easy to use and reggedly (On· ,
structed.

EACH

HECK'S IIG. TO $1.49

AITOMOnVE DEPT.

....

HECK'S REG. $1 .69

HECK'S REG.

HARDWAIIDEPI.

IIARDWARE DEPT.

'I
I'

$1.66

\

�~

.-

. . . ... ..
,

'

'

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•

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...,.

.... •

'

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.llltt•·• ,. • ••

'

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.

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.._

I

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'....

•

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0:

·l

0

.•

:

1

l

.. . .' .. .

•

.

......,

-UI.Y

-NI.Y

10 TO 9'

10 T0 '9

10 TO 9

.

.

:

PRICES IN EFFECT NOW THROUGH SUNDAY, AUG. 27, WHILE QUANTITIES LAST
' LADIES' ~L VESTER

GIRLS

PANT SETS

JUMPER
AND

(o51i a l wear to li t
any scene. Com plate
with
Sleeve leu
poin ted -nsf on d
pull -on
waist.
Choo se hom cool
and com !Orta~ 501ids or pr ints. Sizes 8
to 18.

BLOUSE

,.

SET
,Rugge d corduroy
ond bonded styling.
In solids or pla id s.
• 5izes 7 to 14.

WRITING
TABLETS
IO'I•INCH

SEWING SlAND

PRESCUT

SALAD-FRUIT BOWL

LIMIT 2

•

$1.11

HECK'S

HfJIISIWARE DEPT.

·

HECK'S REG. $1.88

HECK'S REG. 64'

HDUSEWAIE DEPT.

A wr vi nQ dlthet

;

Girts Bonded
DRESSES

Ex tra Stu rdy I" Bro ss Tubul a r l egs .
Man y uses- as o step·both seat- TV
stool- ct1 ild 1s room, etc.

$]44

SJ22

44(

e 4 cups •

$6.99

·sTOOL

.8 PC. SNACK SET

'5.9:eg.

SJ22

HECK'S RIG. $4.88

HfJUSIWAIE D11'1.

HECK'S REG.
$1.88

HfJUSEWAIE DEPT.

HfJUSIWAII IIPT.

..qr
'

'

-

ANCHOR HOCKING
PRESCUT

SAUCE

II

~

.

'~

ENTERPRISE
ALUMINUM

~·

Girls

Packaged
Panties

FLARE JEANS

BOYS PLAID TROUSERS

"Day Of The Week "

Sizes 28 to 34

Heck's Reg. s5.99

"'

HECK'S REG. $1 • 11

99&lt;
-

p

27&lt;

JERGENS

. -.--~----:- j[

2 FOR

SJOO
HOUSEWAIIE
DEI'T.

NEW FREEDOM

HECK'S REG.
$3.99

'
MEN'S
FASHION
LONG SLEEVE

NFL-TEAM

KNIT SHIRTS

,.

WELCOME MATS
All plastic conslruction .

!).18

Solid a nd stripe pat ·

HDuSIWAIIE
DEPT.

knit desiQra . Si tes 7
lo 14ond 4 to 6x .

QUEE~ SIZE

Cho out h om shirh wit h
insignias of the Cleveland
Brown s, Cincinna ti Ben ·
gal t, Saltlmore Colts. New
Yo rk Jeh or Oollo1 Cow ·
boys. White or Croy Col·
ors.

HECK'S REG.
$2.39

HOUSEWAIE
DEPT.

NfJUSEWAIE
Dli'T.

HECK'S REG. $2.29 EACH

ClfJTHIIIG DEI'T.

HECK'S REG. 13' BAR

HDIISIWAIE DEPT.

*2"

MEN'S
CARDIGAN

Dress

SWEATERS

Boys Permanent Press

Washa ble a crylic fiber. Colo rt
of navy, brown, gold b lue or
raspbe rry . Sires: S,M,l, XL

$466

'222·

HECK'S REG. $5.99

~-

HECK'S REG.

Ban lon, ori on or nylqn fabric . Assorted

'2.28

colors to motcn an y ol his clothing . Siz·

ClOTHING DEPT.

39(

es 10to1 3.

Cl fJTHI"' IIIPT.

ClOTHIII&amp; DEPT.

C'l

$218
'

. ASSIINONT. V. ·

160Z.

,,'.

'·

.,
• ..••
• .4

.,

,,

HI\~~2~1G.

OVEN SPRAY

Comp lete minia ture ployHtl with
figun t and a cctnorin IN 'ltar
3-MCiion bog• topped with color·
ft.tl h• ader. Ast.artment co nlittl of
'fort frontl tr Assault , Guardi'll
Co1tlt1 Roman fortrt ts AHac~ ,

'.
{

f ..•

8

$JOO

(
''

'j•
I

'

IIICI'S IIG. $ Ul

ClfJTHIII&amp; DEI'T.

DOLL HOUSE FURNITURE
6 styles to choose from . All plastic furniture .

CHOICE

.

HECk'S REG.
94'EACH

PUSH PULLET
10.

ror Dfl'r.

TOY DEPT.

· ''

It' PISI PIIIIT - ·

Molnls real istic " d u c~ ·cluck·
squa wk" soun d a l wings
whirL Bea utifully molded plas·
tic body, ba lloon whtelt . 16"
push stick with )Oiety knob . An
enterta ining t ncovrQ9tnitn t
lor the leorl'l·toi wa• Mf.

HORSMAN ~

. TEENIE BOPPER

DOLL
lSnLIS

"T..nle Bopptr'' auortment- 11"
toll. All vi.n,l. Fvly iolnted . long
rooted ha ir . " lifll ! like" eyes .

CHOIC.

$199

. $2~~H

HECK'S.IG.
$3.11

HECK'S RIG. $3 .88

,.,,

I

96(

HECK'S REG. ~;c.•t4

'

,.,,.,,

HDIISIWAIE IIPT.

He,k't own " Princtu Sue" panty
hose . New miracle ny~n for better
fit. Si zes~ Short , Mtd ium, Tol l.
Co lo rs of brown , Ci nna mon , Col·
fee, a nc;4 ~ Block.·

68t.

CAR ASSORTMENT

IACH
HECK'S RIG. 14'

HDIISIWAIEDEPT.

PANTYHOSE

FOR

3 STYLES

66(

-'

LADIES
NYLON NUDE

Choose from 3 styles: TROPHIE TRAPPER, WHEElER
DEALER, or RAILSPLITIER .
CHOICE

. TOY DEPT.

EASY-OFF

MINI·
FORT SET
4 STYLES

~

'0{

HECK'S REG.
$5.88

'

SCRAMBLER DRAGSTERS

COLORING BOOKS
\At; ...

HECK'S REG. 78'
TONKA

ASSORTED

Ba sic Fi re Tirt Itt with
( hauls, J.lo rting "cr onk, OM
tire with ma9 whnl and a
luv wrench lor chon 9in Q
wh"lt. Ages,· l 2.

HECK'S RIG. $1 .21

HDIISEWAIEDIPT.

Heck's Reg. 13.99

· MEN'S DRESS SOCKS

ao'nt. f,.nt. CHoiCI

HECK'S REG. 43'

SPORT SHIRTS

Do ubl e knit · mens·weCir
we ave ponts . Puii .. On
waist. In sizes 8 to 18.

LongSieewe
'
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Dl. LAWRENCE I. LAMB
But Most of Body Does
OPEl DAILY
10TO 9

By Lawrence Lamb, M.D.
Dear Dr. Lamb-! am a
high school student and at
school one of the things we
learned is that you will have
a new body every seven
years, because the body
gradually builds new cells to
replace the old ones each
da,y of our lives.
I am a teen-ager who has
had a very hard lime with
my nerves for the past three
years. My question is when
the new nerve cells replace
my old ones, am l likely to
be in a better shape or just
as bad as I am now?
Dear Reader - You must
be a good student. The question indicates ·that you've
been using what you learn to
think about possible applications.
·
I wish I could tell you that
the answer is yes, but the
truth is the nerve cells are

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Ellocicncy i1 the hoppy 11o1e of ofiol11
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tht ~ o ot,ui onal rovch rc camp coo Nint
h'• t1.o la oo"" c l g~~ n.,otion l ol aut·
doc ' '"'-", und ' "'" P' ~II IumoiOo o

Start the football season right for your
with these-sturdy football outfits. Choose
colors of red or blue.

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Gallipolis. Special music will
be presented by the
Angelaires, Sugar Grove, Ohio.
All denominations are illvited to participate in the
Crusade lor Christ. If you
desire more information , feel
free to telephone : Rev. Martha
Mattner, 949-2902; Rev . Frank
Cheesebrew, 949·2120, or Mr .
and Mrs: Oris L. Smith,
General Cha irmen, Seven
Nights lor Christ, 949-3191.

Roberts Heading
Security P_rogram

j

RIO GRANDE - Ray
Roberts has bee named to head
a new campus securi ty
program at Rio Grande College
that will go into effect with the
·start of the fall semester at the
college.
Roberts, a deputy sheriff in
Galli a County, said the new
program will involve a threeman starr that will patrol the
campus on a 24-hour basis. He
, said II]~ new program is, in
response to requests made by
students and staff members at
the college.

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loop\.

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fi t mo st popu lar rifle s
ond shotguns .

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can Unity-a group of black
nations-knew that the International Olympic Committee
sanctioned Rhodesia as a
brother nation last September.

that Is up to his government
and he will not question the
situation.
"Politics are lor politicians
and sports are for sportsmen," he says.
But if politicians interfere
One c o u 1 d fairly ask
with
sportsmen?
whether the Olympics, this
"No comment."
addled old carnival of sweat,
is again being used for po·
The m o d e r n Olympics
litical gymnastics.
have been beleaguered with
Meanwhile, back on the problems, from the very first
track, Mamo Wolde runs . in Athens in 1896 when swimWolde is the d~lending Mara- mers jumped out of the wathon gold medal winner. He ter because it was too cold,
moves with the feathery to the b)ack·gloved demongrace of a ghost His legs, stration last Olympics. ·in
delicate and powerful as a Mexico City ,
thoroughbred's, have carried
The Marathon has perhaps
him from the mountains of had more madness about it
Ethiopia to what he hopes than all other Olympic events
will be a fine climb on to the combined.
Olympic winner's stand. He
In 1900, a Paris bakery deis 39 years old. This, he said livery boy named · Michel
would be his last race - if Theato, won the race in his
his co untry allows him to home town, but skeptics berace .
lieved that he knew shortWolde, who has a pleasant cuts in the Marathon route.
job back home as lieutenant
There. was the famous
in the Imperial Guard of Durando Pietri incident in
Haile Selassie, has no say in the 1900 games. Pietri, a
whether he runs or not. All little Italian shoemaker,
. came into Wembley Stadium
and lhe last several hundred
yards 'of the race as if he were
11 slowly fizzling balloon.
BE
TO SHOP THE JONES BOYS
Englishmen nearby carried
him across the finish line.
THIS WEEK FOR COUNTY FAIR
He
was disqualified.
,,
BEEF BONANZA BUYS!
'In 190&gt;1 in . St. Louis, a
clever fellow named· Fred
Lorz ~ccepted a ride in a
passing car when the heat
of the road got too much
for him. He passed all his
sweaty colleagues. When the
car'S radiator broke down,
·Fred felt chipper again, and
ran the last !lve easy miles
to cross the finish line first.
Fred thought this was S.!J.
humoroUJ that he laughed
and told the story on the
winner's stand. To his , sur·
The·Jones Boys went Ill tile
prise, the gold medal was
yanked out of his paws. local
purchased
. In the Marathon there was
''
once a false start, of all
lhings. Another runner got ill
4ft &amp; FFA SteelS. We a11 proud Ill offer
from munching on food
given him by spectators
this quality beef at low budget ·prices!
along the way. Abebe Bikela, ,
predecessor and countryman
of Mai!IO Walde, ~arne home
first in Tukyo barefoot. His
'shoes had been pinching him.
And Emil Zatopek, the great
Czech long-distance runner,
ran the marathon for the
first lime In his life in 1952
and won a gold medal. His
7-00IIiiWi.ii.II-AIIIlN
...- ·POMEROY, OHIO
response to this most hal-

SINGLE SHOT

12-16-AND 20 GAUGE

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(I CARTON)

~?

~;;;.,""-:/ WrNCHESTER

SHOTGUN SHELLS

By IRA BERKOW
NEA Sports Editor
MUNIC.H- (NEA)
Nothing so typifies the Olympic Games as does the Marathon event in some incredible
fashion , Marathon rWJners
totter 26 miles, 385 yards . In
some equally fantastic and
phantasmagoric way, the
Olympic Games trudge on .
And when the Ethiopians,
winners of the last three
Marathon gold medals, got
entangled with international
sports groups in the latest
furor, historians clucked
that it was a match made on
Mount Olympus.
Ethiopia ran in tandem with
several fellow A I r i c a n
nations. They threatened to
hustle their teams out of
Munich unless the 'Rhodesians were run out of town
(irs!. The charge is that
Rhodesia's is a "while racist
rebel government"
Yet few actually believed
that the protesting African
teams would pull out since
the Supreme Council of Afri-

SPORTS DEPT.
•

The campus security Ioree
will work in cooperation with
local law enforcement officers,
and will be in radio contact
with the sheriff's office and
local marshalL
According to Roberts, the
new prog ram also includes the
possibility of initiating
emergency vehicle service for
the campus.
·
Amember of the Rio Grande
College staff for 13 years,
Roberts has completed 262
hours in law enforcement
training courses at Hocking
Technical College. He has
compiled an A average in his
work .
Roberts is also certified in
Advanced First Aid techniques
and
Red Cross training ,
lowed of events? "the marathon is a very boring race."
he said .
MARRIAGE LICENSE
· The last word on the Mara· James WiUiam Slewart, 21,
thon and how it mirrors the
Olympics, must come from Rutland, laborer, and Kathy
Pheidippides . This famous Irene Elliot, 19, Pt. Pleasant,
Greek, in the da ys before clerk.
telephones , ran the 26·plus
miles between Athens and
A thought for .the day: British
Marathon to deliver a message lroin his general to .his poet Thomas de Quincey said,
f e 11 ow Athenians. As he " It is notorious that the
came huffing and puffing memory strengthens as you lay
l~to town he cried, " Rejoice
burdens upon it, and becomes
- we conquer," and then fell trustworthy as you trust it."
dead.

Olympics Marathon Tottering On

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COSM,ETIC DEPT.

Crusade Planned

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GYM SHOES

held a slightly superior position
in the game but that it would
probably end in a draw.
Fischer has a 9.5 to 6.5lead in
tournament points, but needs
another three points to capture
the title. A point is awarded for
a win and each player receives
half a point in a draw.
Fischer Tuesday decided on
the little-known Pires defense
against the world champion's
king pawn opening in the 17th
game. But in the end, Spassky
sealed his 41st move in a brown
envelope.
Shortly alter the game
began, grandmaster Eyfim
Geller, Spassky's chief second,
circulated an open letter. It

'

\

l
I

said Fischer's "whims were

deliberately aimed" at
throwing the champion off
balance, to exercise pressure
and make him lose his lighting
spirit.
Geller posted an olficia l
protest with German arbiter
Lothar Schmid asking to have
the playing hall examined by
competent experts for chemi~
cal substances and electronic
devices" that might be used to
distract Spassky.
He also protested against
Fischer's tactics-the American's complaints . against
television, spectator noise,
demands to have the match
moved to a private room and
his late arrivals. Geller said
such tactics "we·re contrary to
all agreements on gentlemanly
behavior."
Sctunid studied the letter
during the night.
Spassky and Fischer spent
their. night ;rtudying prospects
for remaining play in the adjourned game. Most grandmasters predicted a draw but
gave the edge to the champion.

0:' I'm by NU,

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COSMETIC IJIPT.

·fine

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" 1 am quite sure we could emerge with a military victory
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11

committee chairmen of the

HUNTING VEST

·REED

A rned iurn woi11ht , horG woor in g &lt;oo l

HECK'S REG. $109

cenh to lhe some address and osk
for " The Menopause" booklet.

Southern Cluster mel.
The crusade will be held
October 23 through October 29
at the Racine Southern High
School. Evangelist will be the
Rev. Paul Hawks, Grace
United Methodist Church,

SAF-T-BAC

HUNTING
COAT

EXTRA DRY

FSSP, Radio City Station, New York,
N.Y. 70019. Foro cop y of Dr. Lomb's ·
boo•let on tlte menop(luse, senti SO

The cup-coming Key 73
Crusade was planned - and
goals established - Monday
evening at the Bethany United
Methodist Church when

$299

SAF-T-BAC

ARRID

your questions to Dr. Lamb,
in core of this newspaper, P.O. Box

REYKJAVIK, Iceland (UPI)
- Russian aides to worlq chess
champion Boris Spassky asked
Tuesday that the hall where
Spassky and U.S. challenger
Bobby Fischer are playing be
checked for "chemical substances and electronic
devices."
The Russian protest, which
claimed the American's antics
were ungentlemanly, came
after Fischer's demands for
more quiet in the hall resulted
in the removal of three rows or
seats. Fischer had tlireatened
to quit WJ!ess the hall was fixed
so he c.ould better concentrate.
AI the chess board, the 17th
game of the 24-game $250,000
match was adjourned after 40
moves Tuesday. It resumes at
I p.m. EDT today with Spassky
holding both rooks and live
pawns to the challenger's rook,
knight and six pawns.
Upon adjournment, most
grandmasters felt Spassky

B[RRY'S WORlD

Two Instructors Hired

.,,

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Women who are using an
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to constantly replace them - · creased menstrual bleeding.
selves and then what causes The i ncr e a se d bleeding
them to stop doing this, re- during the menses persisted
suiting in old age, we may be through at least six. months
able. to actually prevent of the study . The increased
aging and preserve constant loss of blood contributed to
youth.
an increase in anemia . It is
In the meantime, I would known · that menstruating
like to encourage you by say- women commonly need more
ing that many y'ounger peo- iron because of their blood
pie who are nervous during loss than they do in the other
their teen-age and matura-. periods of their life or than
tion years gradually become men require. This study
more secure about them- would suggest that women
selves and the world. With who are using the IUD ought
this they gain self.confidence to be particularly conscienand feel better. In other tious about having medical
words even though you still checkups and ought to be
have the same nerve cells, particularly careful about
you learn to function better their iron intake.
and consequently you do
&lt;NEWSPAPER ENTERPRCSE ASSN .!
better.

22 RIFLE SCOPE

e

'

the main ones in the body
that don't seem to be regenerated. hi other words.
you're stuck with. pretty
much the same nerve . cells
throughout life. The only
thing that happens is that in
later years a certain number
of nerve cells gradually .deteriorate so that they're less
available fo r thought procesesses. This usually doesn't
cause too much problem on
this basis alone, because .
most people don't use all of
their bram ·cells anyway. It
is true that a large portion of
the .rest of the body will
gradually be replaced cell by
cell, This is one of the interesting things about living
cells. Many of them have the
capacity to_ replace themselves continuously. As long
as this continues a state of
youth is maintained. II
Nature's secrets can be
learned to the point that we
understand what causes cells

WfAVER

The 3x to 6• Model V22 is
oreotlor oil kinds of shooting
with 22 's. For short range
hul'lling o nd plinking, the low ·
er power~, Jx to~ .. , should be
used . The middle power s, ~ ..
to 5•, ore best fo r mo~ t sm(l ll
game hunting o1 mode rote
range. The bx letting i$ u cel lent for lo ng range ~armint,
pe5t, and target •hooting from
a re~t positio n. ·

helmer . One si ze
firs al l.

HECK'S REG. $17.99

HUNTING

White &amp;Blue

FOOTBALL

Spassky Counters
Fischer Demands

·Nerves Don't Regenerate

PRICES II EFFECT NOW THROUGH SUNDAY1 AUG. 271 WHILE QUANTITIES LAST .
COLEMAN

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'•

OPIIIAILY
10 TO 9

.

.•

In 1968, a U.N. resolution
condemned the Soviet bloc
invasion of Czechoslovakia ... bul
Russia vetoed it in the Security
Council .

Aug.24-

Two instructors, including a
high school librarian were
employed Tuesday night by lhe
Southwestern Loca l Board of
Education.
Linda Ramsey, a graduate of
Southwestern High School and
Rio Grande College, was hired
as an elementary teacher .
John Hopkins, a graduate of
Morehead University, was
emp loyed as librarian. '!'he
board voted to participate in
the Federal hot lunch program .
Student lunches were in creased from 25 to 30 cents per
day while teachers wilt pay 40
cents for lunches.
In other matters, the board
ado pted the 1972-73 school
calendar submi tted by County
School Superintendent
Clarence Thompson; approved

high
school classroom
sc hed ulin g; accepted the
resigna tion of Rick Altizer, a
bus dr iver; employed Beulah
Mae Boster as a substitute
cook; awarded Odell Termite
Service a contract for extermin ating the district's t~ree
buildings and voted to bond
high school principal Uoyd L.
Myers and the lunchroom
personnel.
LICENSE LIFTED
W. Thomas Evans pleaded

no contest and was sentenced
to three days in jail, fined $150
and costs, and had his driver's
license suspended six months
on conviction of DWI in Meigs
County Common Pleas Court
by Judge John C. Bacon.

·!-··

Sept. 4

.

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GJhe

G}air

Adu lt • $1-50 Children under IZ. 25c Childr en
admitted rree until noon daily except Sat. &amp; Sun .

Midway ~ ide s up to % off until n oon daily except Sa t. &amp; Sun.
OFF 1-71 AT 17th AVE., COLUMBUS

-·
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Aug.24,25

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Boots Randolph,
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Chet Atkins,
27

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Aug.JO

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Aug.31

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Sept 1

Show
Sept2, 3

with Kim &amp; Dave

4

Kenny Rogers &amp; The 1st Edition Aug. 26 The Golddiggers Aug. 26. 27
Heywoods Aug. 28, 29 Nashville Brass &amp; Ray Price Aug. 30
AI Green Sept 1 Jody Miller &amp; Mac Davis Sept. 2. 3
ing ~ands, Amateur Boxing, Tra ~tor Pulls, Horse Pulling, Harness Raci
Hell Drivers, 7-Up Balloon Race, Miss Ohio State Fair Pageant Horse Races
Circus, Dave Merrifield, Ohio Folk Festival , Exhibits and. Displays. '
Livettock Ex_!libilio'1, Hone Show, Jr. f1\r. St1t~ Fair Art Show

�... . .. . . . . .

»··~·-·

,,

~

..

"'

..

'

Dl. LAWRENCE I. LAMB
But Most of Body Does
OPEl DAILY
10TO 9

By Lawrence Lamb, M.D.
Dear Dr. Lamb-! am a
high school student and at
school one of the things we
learned is that you will have
a new body every seven
years, because the body
gradually builds new cells to
replace the old ones each
da,y of our lives.
I am a teen-ager who has
had a very hard lime with
my nerves for the past three
years. My question is when
the new nerve cells replace
my old ones, am l likely to
be in a better shape or just
as bad as I am now?
Dear Reader - You must
be a good student. The question indicates ·that you've
been using what you learn to
think about possible applications.
·
I wish I could tell you that
the answer is yes, but the
truth is the nerve cells are

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Ellocicncy i1 the hoppy 11o1e of ofiol11
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tho , u ...,.,.y ol th.t le9"ndnry Coltm&lt;ln
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h'• t1.o la oo"" c l g~~ n.,otion l ol aut·
doc ' '"'-", und ' "'" P' ~II IumoiOo o

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with these-sturdy football outfits. Choose
colors of red or blue.

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Gallipolis. Special music will
be presented by the
Angelaires, Sugar Grove, Ohio.
All denominations are illvited to participate in the
Crusade lor Christ. If you
desire more information , feel
free to telephone : Rev. Martha
Mattner, 949-2902; Rev . Frank
Cheesebrew, 949·2120, or Mr .
and Mrs: Oris L. Smith,
General Cha irmen, Seven
Nights lor Christ, 949-3191.

Roberts Heading
Security P_rogram

j

RIO GRANDE - Ray
Roberts has bee named to head
a new campus securi ty
program at Rio Grande College
that will go into effect with the
·start of the fall semester at the
college.
Roberts, a deputy sheriff in
Galli a County, said the new
program will involve a threeman starr that will patrol the
campus on a 24-hour basis. He
, said II]~ new program is, in
response to requests made by
students and staff members at
the college.

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REG.
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22 LONG RIFLE

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can Unity-a group of black
nations-knew that the International Olympic Committee
sanctioned Rhodesia as a
brother nation last September.

that Is up to his government
and he will not question the
situation.
"Politics are lor politicians
and sports are for sportsmen," he says.
But if politicians interfere
One c o u 1 d fairly ask
with
sportsmen?
whether the Olympics, this
"No comment."
addled old carnival of sweat,
is again being used for po·
The m o d e r n Olympics
litical gymnastics.
have been beleaguered with
Meanwhile, back on the problems, from the very first
track, Mamo Wolde runs . in Athens in 1896 when swimWolde is the d~lending Mara- mers jumped out of the wathon gold medal winner. He ter because it was too cold,
moves with the feathery to the b)ack·gloved demongrace of a ghost His legs, stration last Olympics. ·in
delicate and powerful as a Mexico City ,
thoroughbred's, have carried
The Marathon has perhaps
him from the mountains of had more madness about it
Ethiopia to what he hopes than all other Olympic events
will be a fine climb on to the combined.
Olympic winner's stand. He
In 1900, a Paris bakery deis 39 years old. This, he said livery boy named · Michel
would be his last race - if Theato, won the race in his
his co untry allows him to home town, but skeptics berace .
lieved that he knew shortWolde, who has a pleasant cuts in the Marathon route.
job back home as lieutenant
There. was the famous
in the Imperial Guard of Durando Pietri incident in
Haile Selassie, has no say in the 1900 games. Pietri, a
whether he runs or not. All little Italian shoemaker,
. came into Wembley Stadium
and lhe last several hundred
yards 'of the race as if he were
11 slowly fizzling balloon.
BE
TO SHOP THE JONES BOYS
Englishmen nearby carried
him across the finish line.
THIS WEEK FOR COUNTY FAIR
He
was disqualified.
,,
BEEF BONANZA BUYS!
'In 190&gt;1 in . St. Louis, a
clever fellow named· Fred
Lorz ~ccepted a ride in a
passing car when the heat
of the road got too much
for him. He passed all his
sweaty colleagues. When the
car'S radiator broke down,
·Fred felt chipper again, and
ran the last !lve easy miles
to cross the finish line first.
Fred thought this was S.!J.
humoroUJ that he laughed
and told the story on the
winner's stand. To his , sur·
The·Jones Boys went Ill tile
prise, the gold medal was
yanked out of his paws. local
purchased
. In the Marathon there was
''
once a false start, of all
lhings. Another runner got ill
4ft &amp; FFA SteelS. We a11 proud Ill offer
from munching on food
given him by spectators
this quality beef at low budget ·prices!
along the way. Abebe Bikela, ,
predecessor and countryman
of Mai!IO Walde, ~arne home
first in Tukyo barefoot. His
'shoes had been pinching him.
And Emil Zatopek, the great
Czech long-distance runner,
ran the marathon for the
first lime In his life in 1952
and won a gold medal. His
7-00IIiiWi.ii.II-AIIIlN
...- ·POMEROY, OHIO
response to this most hal-

SINGLE SHOT

12-16-AND 20 GAUGE

10 BOXES
(I CARTON)

~?

~;;;.,""-:/ WrNCHESTER

SHOTGUN SHELLS

By IRA BERKOW
NEA Sports Editor
MUNIC.H- (NEA)
Nothing so typifies the Olympic Games as does the Marathon event in some incredible
fashion , Marathon rWJners
totter 26 miles, 385 yards . In
some equally fantastic and
phantasmagoric way, the
Olympic Games trudge on .
And when the Ethiopians,
winners of the last three
Marathon gold medals, got
entangled with international
sports groups in the latest
furor, historians clucked
that it was a match made on
Mount Olympus.
Ethiopia ran in tandem with
several fellow A I r i c a n
nations. They threatened to
hustle their teams out of
Munich unless the 'Rhodesians were run out of town
(irs!. The charge is that
Rhodesia's is a "while racist
rebel government"
Yet few actually believed
that the protesting African
teams would pull out since
the Supreme Council of Afri-

SPORTS DEPT.
•

The campus security Ioree
will work in cooperation with
local law enforcement officers,
and will be in radio contact
with the sheriff's office and
local marshalL
According to Roberts, the
new prog ram also includes the
possibility of initiating
emergency vehicle service for
the campus.
·
Amember of the Rio Grande
College staff for 13 years,
Roberts has completed 262
hours in law enforcement
training courses at Hocking
Technical College. He has
compiled an A average in his
work .
Roberts is also certified in
Advanced First Aid techniques
and
Red Cross training ,
lowed of events? "the marathon is a very boring race."
he said .
MARRIAGE LICENSE
· The last word on the Mara· James WiUiam Slewart, 21,
thon and how it mirrors the
Olympics, must come from Rutland, laborer, and Kathy
Pheidippides . This famous Irene Elliot, 19, Pt. Pleasant,
Greek, in the da ys before clerk.
telephones , ran the 26·plus
miles between Athens and
A thought for .the day: British
Marathon to deliver a message lroin his general to .his poet Thomas de Quincey said,
f e 11 ow Athenians. As he " It is notorious that the
came huffing and puffing memory strengthens as you lay
l~to town he cried, " Rejoice
burdens upon it, and becomes
- we conquer," and then fell trustworthy as you trust it."
dead.

Olympics Marathon Tottering On

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Complete with pistol type belt.

COSM,ETIC DEPT.

Crusade Planned

HECK'S REG.
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GYM SHOES

held a slightly superior position
in the game but that it would
probably end in a draw.
Fischer has a 9.5 to 6.5lead in
tournament points, but needs
another three points to capture
the title. A point is awarded for
a win and each player receives
half a point in a draw.
Fischer Tuesday decided on
the little-known Pires defense
against the world champion's
king pawn opening in the 17th
game. But in the end, Spassky
sealed his 41st move in a brown
envelope.
Shortly alter the game
began, grandmaster Eyfim
Geller, Spassky's chief second,
circulated an open letter. It

'

\

l
I

said Fischer's "whims were

deliberately aimed" at
throwing the champion off
balance, to exercise pressure
and make him lose his lighting
spirit.
Geller posted an olficia l
protest with German arbiter
Lothar Schmid asking to have
the playing hall examined by
competent experts for chemi~
cal substances and electronic
devices" that might be used to
distract Spassky.
He also protested against
Fischer's tactics-the American's complaints . against
television, spectator noise,
demands to have the match
moved to a private room and
his late arrivals. Geller said
such tactics "we·re contrary to
all agreements on gentlemanly
behavior."
Sctunid studied the letter
during the night.
Spassky and Fischer spent
their. night ;rtudying prospects
for remaining play in the adjourned game. Most grandmasters predicted a draw but
gave the edge to the champion.

0:' I'm by NU,

(

county fairs and

COSMETIC IJIPT.

·fine

'

~

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i

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·r

In~~

" 1 am quite sure we could emerge with a military victory
at Flamingo Park WITHOUT bombing'"

11

committee chairmen of the

HUNTING VEST

·REED

A rned iurn woi11ht , horG woor in g &lt;oo l

HECK'S REG. $109

cenh to lhe some address and osk
for " The Menopause" booklet.

Southern Cluster mel.
The crusade will be held
October 23 through October 29
at the Racine Southern High
School. Evangelist will be the
Rev. Paul Hawks, Grace
United Methodist Church,

SAF-T-BAC

HUNTING
COAT

EXTRA DRY

FSSP, Radio City Station, New York,
N.Y. 70019. Foro cop y of Dr. Lomb's ·
boo•let on tlte menop(luse, senti SO

The cup-coming Key 73
Crusade was planned - and
goals established - Monday
evening at the Bethany United
Methodist Church when

$299

SAF-T-BAC

ARRID

your questions to Dr. Lamb,
in core of this newspaper, P.O. Box

REYKJAVIK, Iceland (UPI)
- Russian aides to worlq chess
champion Boris Spassky asked
Tuesday that the hall where
Spassky and U.S. challenger
Bobby Fischer are playing be
checked for "chemical substances and electronic
devices."
The Russian protest, which
claimed the American's antics
were ungentlemanly, came
after Fischer's demands for
more quiet in the hall resulted
in the removal of three rows or
seats. Fischer had tlireatened
to quit WJ!ess the hall was fixed
so he c.ould better concentrate.
AI the chess board, the 17th
game of the 24-game $250,000
match was adjourned after 40
moves Tuesday. It resumes at
I p.m. EDT today with Spassky
holding both rooks and live
pawns to the challenger's rook,
knight and six pawns.
Upon adjournment, most
grandmasters felt Spassky

B[RRY'S WORlD

Two Instructors Hired

.,,

SPOil'S DEPT.

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Women who are using an
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ported that the device in·

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6

• • •

CAMPUS
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to constantly replace them - · creased menstrual bleeding.
selves and then what causes The i ncr e a se d bleeding
them to stop doing this, re- during the menses persisted
suiting in old age, we may be through at least six. months
able. to actually prevent of the study . The increased
aging and preserve constant loss of blood contributed to
youth.
an increase in anemia . It is
In the meantime, I would known · that menstruating
like to encourage you by say- women commonly need more
ing that many y'ounger peo- iron because of their blood
pie who are nervous during loss than they do in the other
their teen-age and matura-. periods of their life or than
tion years gradually become men require. This study
more secure about them- would suggest that women
selves and the world. With who are using the IUD ought
this they gain self.confidence to be particularly conscienand feel better. In other tious about having medical
words even though you still checkups and ought to be
have the same nerve cells, particularly careful about
you learn to function better their iron intake.
and consequently you do
&lt;NEWSPAPER ENTERPRCSE ASSN .!
better.

22 RIFLE SCOPE

e

'

the main ones in the body
that don't seem to be regenerated. hi other words.
you're stuck with. pretty
much the same nerve . cells
throughout life. The only
thing that happens is that in
later years a certain number
of nerve cells gradually .deteriorate so that they're less
available fo r thought procesesses. This usually doesn't
cause too much problem on
this basis alone, because .
most people don't use all of
their bram ·cells anyway. It
is true that a large portion of
the .rest of the body will
gradually be replaced cell by
cell, This is one of the interesting things about living
cells. Many of them have the
capacity to_ replace themselves continuously. As long
as this continues a state of
youth is maintained. II
Nature's secrets can be
learned to the point that we
understand what causes cells

WfAVER

The 3x to 6• Model V22 is
oreotlor oil kinds of shooting
with 22 's. For short range
hul'lling o nd plinking, the low ·
er power~, Jx to~ .. , should be
used . The middle power s, ~ ..
to 5•, ore best fo r mo~ t sm(l ll
game hunting o1 mode rote
range. The bx letting i$ u cel lent for lo ng range ~armint,
pe5t, and target •hooting from
a re~t positio n. ·

helmer . One si ze
firs al l.

HECK'S REG. $17.99

HUNTING

White &amp;Blue

FOOTBALL

Spassky Counters
Fischer Demands

·Nerves Don't Regenerate

PRICES II EFFECT NOW THROUGH SUNDAY1 AUG. 271 WHILE QUANTITIES LAST .
COLEMAN

~

.17 -U. v.Dy Sentlnel,Middleport·Pomeroy, o., Austill :a, 1m

'•

OPIIIAILY
10 TO 9

.

.•

In 1968, a U.N. resolution
condemned the Soviet bloc
invasion of Czechoslovakia ... bul
Russia vetoed it in the Security
Council .

Aug.24-

Two instructors, including a
high school librarian were
employed Tuesday night by lhe
Southwestern Loca l Board of
Education.
Linda Ramsey, a graduate of
Southwestern High School and
Rio Grande College, was hired
as an elementary teacher .
John Hopkins, a graduate of
Morehead University, was
emp loyed as librarian. '!'he
board voted to participate in
the Federal hot lunch program .
Student lunches were in creased from 25 to 30 cents per
day while teachers wilt pay 40
cents for lunches.
In other matters, the board
ado pted the 1972-73 school
calendar submi tted by County
School Superintendent
Clarence Thompson; approved

high
school classroom
sc hed ulin g; accepted the
resigna tion of Rick Altizer, a
bus dr iver; employed Beulah
Mae Boster as a substitute
cook; awarded Odell Termite
Service a contract for extermin ating the district's t~ree
buildings and voted to bond
high school principal Uoyd L.
Myers and the lunchroom
personnel.
LICENSE LIFTED
W. Thomas Evans pleaded

no contest and was sentenced
to three days in jail, fined $150
and costs, and had his driver's
license suspended six months
on conviction of DWI in Meigs
County Common Pleas Court
by Judge John C. Bacon.

·!-··

Sept. 4

.

'

GJhe

G}air

Adu lt • $1-50 Children under IZ. 25c Childr en
admitted rree until noon daily except Sat. &amp; Sun .

Midway ~ ide s up to % off until n oon daily except Sa t. &amp; Sun.
OFF 1-71 AT 17th AVE., COLUMBUS

-·
••
•
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Glen Campbell
Aug.24,25

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Boots Randolph,
Floyd Cramer
Chet Atkins,
27

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See our great selection of gift watches . We have lhe
newest styles , the latest features . Caravella by
Bulova .. Expensive watches at inexpensive prices.
From $10.95.
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Aug.JO

aTurner
Aug.31

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SKIPPER CALENOIAL "M"
17)tWtll.
Automltte.

Sept 1

Show
Sept2, 3

with Kim &amp; Dave

4

Kenny Rogers &amp; The 1st Edition Aug. 26 The Golddiggers Aug. 26. 27
Heywoods Aug. 28, 29 Nashville Brass &amp; Ray Price Aug. 30
AI Green Sept 1 Jody Miller &amp; Mac Davis Sept. 2. 3
ing ~ands, Amateur Boxing, Tra ~tor Pulls, Horse Pulling, Harness Raci
Hell Drivers, 7-Up Balloon Race, Miss Ohio State Fair Pageant Horse Races
Circus, Dave Merrifield, Ohio Folk Festival , Exhibits and. Displays. '
Livettock Ex_!libilio'1, Hone Show, Jr. f1\r. St1t~ Fair Art Show

�.. -

..

.

•

.~.

18 - The Duily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 .• Au~ust 2:1, 1972

,

-

Sentinel Classifieds Get Action! Sentinel Classzfieds Get Results!
·WANt ADS
INFORMATION
. OEAD\.INES

Card of Thanks

) P .M .. Day Before Pubt!cation·. WE WISH to ~xten d our"si n cer~
Monday Deadline. 9 a .m .
lllt=~nks to the Ewing Funeral
Cancel lation - Corrections
Home . Rev . Dwight Zavit z,
Will be. accepted unti l 9 a .m . tor. Sy rt=~cusl;.' La di es AuJCiliary :
Day ot Publication
fr iends and r elat i ve s for th e
REGULATIONS
beautiful floral otf er ings, food
Tht Publisher reserv es the
right to ed!t or r eject any ads. · and cards; the ones that
he lped in any way during th e
deemed
objectional.
T he
publ isher will not be r espon sible
l im e of sickness and death of
for moi't&gt; than
Insertion .

·'

our doughier and sister, Mr s.

one in correct

Mar ie Donovan . Your kind
ness will rlever be lorg 0tten.
Walter Cook andfami!y
8 73 lip

RATES

·For Wan, Ad Serv ice
scents per word 'one insertion
Minimum Charge 75c '
12 cents per word th ree
consecutive i nsert ioris .
18 cents per word six con·

-------- - - - Lost

secutive insertions . ,

ads and ads paid within 10 day s."

CARD OF THANKS
&amp; OBITUARY

51.50 tor 50 word minimum .
Each additional word 2c
BLIND ADS
Addit iona l 2Sc Charge per
Advertisemen t .
OFFICE HOURS 1:
: 8: 30a .m. to S: OO, p.m• Dall'f ,
8 : 30 a .m . to 12: 00 Noon

Saturday ,

AIJ;·ed
Soda[

.'\.ote.~

eyeg ta sse:. . in
vicinity of Veterans Hosp1taL
it found cal l 992 -7791 alter 4
p.m.

WOMAN 'S

25 Per Cent Oiscoi.Jn t on pa id

Notice

CALL US FIRST
AND.SAVE $ $
No Job Too Large
Or Too Small

Commercial
Residential
Exterior
Interior
Sandblasting
Brush - Roller
Air- Air less
Spray

GHEEN BROTHERS
PAINT CONTRACTORS

NOTICE
I WILL NOT 'be i-esponsible for
any · :debts contra cted by
anyone other than myself .
Signed, Donald E. Whaley ,
Rf. 1, Shade. Oh io.
8-22·3tp
REWARD , lor shopping at
Showalter's Wet Pet Shop,
Chester, Ohio· 10 per cent of
your total purchase may be
appl ied to the purchase of any
ceram ic items .
'8 2·30tp

Coli 949·3295 - 949-4651
After 6

''HEI L"
HEAHNG &amp;
COOLING

Sunday School attendance on
Window
August 20 was 37, the offering
A1r Conditioners
KOSCOT KOSMETICS and
$19.30. Worship services were
wigs, more new product s
t-h : Wa :er Heaters
held at II o'clock with atcoming soon. Fnr free
Pl umb1ng
dem ons tration . phone 992 tendance 18. the Rev. Lehman
5113.
c
lec
:ncal
Work
speaking from Hosea I :2-10,
8-11 1fc
··Go" . '"A Challenge"' - "God
does not send us alone, he goes
YARD Sa le, 203 Butternut Ave.,
with us."
Pomeroy , Ohio ; " A few an tiques. antique bottles. and
Several from here attended
misce ll aneous
items ,"
the Homecoming at Orange on
Saturday , August 26th and
Ni n 1a
&amp;mday, Aug . 20. The afSunday, August 27th .
Po1neroy
. 0.
ternoon program featured the
82221p
"Flowers Brothers Quartet ..
from Parkersburg. W. Va.
Charles Domigan, pastor and
Mike Haseltqn of Middleport,
spoke and sang. ·Mr. and Mrs.
Harrisonville
Chas. D. Woode sang. "Till the
Slorm Passes Over. ' ' And
s()('it•h ~cw~
there
were
many
•
congregational
nwnbers.
Several churches and pla ces
were represented .
Weekend gucsls of Mr. and
Alfred Church .will have its
Mrs. EdwHrd P. King were
annual Homecom in g on
Mr. and Mrs. David Dailey rlwir daughter , Leota Norris.
Sunday, Sept. 17, fea turing 1De bbie Hauber 1 are an- S• ·n Jil lllll )", Toni, twr1
"The Revelations Quartet" n, •un cin g the birth of a daughters w1d friends and
from Athens, 0., and other daughter , Ray Lyn. Ma - g1·anddaughter Patty GIJOdin,
home and local talent.
ternal grandparents are all 11f Akr'IJn. They visited
The Alfred Women's ~ociety Mr . i!nd Mrs. Junior Hauber fri ends in Pomeroy and alsu
held its regular meeltng on Hnd mate rnal grandpar ents called r1n Mr. cmd · Mr-.; .
Tuesday evening. Aug . 15, at ilre Mr . and Mrs. ~'red Frankl in King and Sims. Billy ,
the home of Nellie Parker, with Lark ins .
FnHlkie .Jr ., Rod ney and
an ill ttendance of 9 members.
Mr . ilnd Mrs. David Smith Vincen 1, Mr. and Mrs. William
The meeting, in charge of and David. Dee Dee and Nancy .L King and da ughters. Mary.
Nellie Parker, President Baum, Ches ter, were viSiting Cindy, Mr. and Mrs. Jack
'lpened wilh prayer by Thelma Mr . and Mrs. Tom Drake. Kin gs and suns and daughter,
Henderson . The song " He 0 Jiumbus.
Jack Jr., Jeffery . Jennifer. all
Understands" was sung.
Mr . and Mrs . Lawrence 11f Harrisonvi lle and Mr.
Sixteen siok and shut.in calls Chevalier and granddaughter, Charles King and daughter,
were reported.
Walla ce. W. Va .. spent a Susan Mari e and Mr. and Mrs.
Letters were read from weekend with Mr. and Mrs . Edward J. King and so ns,
Beulah Ballard. Dis!. Pres. and Wayne Prince.
Jr,ey, Michael , and Tummy uf
Janice McGee, Dis!. Sec 'y .
Mr. and Mrs. Howard Young. Kingsbury Rr Jad .
Officers to be elected and in- Paden. City, W. Va . and Mr .
Guests tJf Mr. and Mrs.
stalled and reported to the Dis! and Mrs. Garth Smith were Edward P. King last week
Sec"y by Oct. I.
dinner guests of Mr. and Mrs. were Minnie Coles an d sons,
The Nominating Committee, Emmell Stcthem.
Wayne ond J ohn and daughter.
Isola Taylor. Florence Spencer
Mrs. Bonnie Meacham and
Mr and Mrs . Harold Holter
and Grace Swartz to report at and family and Mr. and Mrs . sun and daugh ter , Edward J.
the Sept. meeting.
Dav1d Smith and family were Coles and girl friend. all of
The District meeting, Sept. visiling Mr. and Mrs. Ll oy d AknJn visited the Kin gs also .
20, at the Nelsonville, U.M. McPeek. Belleville. W. Va .
They also visited Mr . and Mrs.
Church.
Mr . and Mrs .. George Fry. Orville Marks of Millfie ld and
A Worship mee ti ng on Parkersburg, W. Va . were £~11e ncled the Athens County
Wednesday, Oct. 25, in the visiting Mr. and Mrs. Harold Fair.
Athens U.M. Church .
Jim and Mill')' King and
New lun.
The West Ohio Conference
children
have moved from the
SC11!1 Hauber was visiting
meeting on Oct. 29, at Wor- recenlly with Mark Holter.
Edward J. Kin g farm to
thington. 0.
Donna Sissun, Vienna , W. Pomeroy .
Clara Follrod Jed the Va .. wa s visiting Serena
The Edward J . King fa rm
program on " Varieties of Sis,son.
has been sold to Mr . Joe Lubtrs
Service" from the Program
Mrs . Cora Emrick and Mrs. uf Ct,J umbus. ll is better kn own
Booklet "Leap In Faith. " Elwood Emrick, Lancaster, 0. as the old Frank King farm.
which was presented in were overnight guests of Mr .
Weekend guests of Will iam
dialogue from by Nellie and Mrs. Wayne Prin ce. They and Cledith
King and
Parker, Helen Woode, Nina ab1 , visiled with Mr . and Mrs. daughters. Mary and Cindy,
Robinson. Thelma Henderson, Frank Dorst.
were Cledith's mother, Mr s.
Osie Mae Follrod, Isola Taylor .
l.e 1,ta Johnson, Port la nd, Mary Marks of Athens.
June Stearns, and Osie Hen· visi led with Ethel Larkins.
SWlday guests uf Mr . and
derson .
Mr. and Mrs. Millard Ball Mrs. _Ernesl Hudnall of Alban y
The next meeting to be held hav e moved to Portland , 0 .
were th eir daughter, Joan
on Tuesday evening, Sept. 19, Mr. and Mr s. Bill Kouse and King, and son·in-law. Ja ck
at the home of Isola Taylor , daughters. Chicago. IlL visited Kin g and their children , Ja ck
with everyone contributing to a wi lll Leuna Hensley.
Jr .. Jeffery. Jenni t'er J.ea of
prog ram .
Mr. and Mrs . Ted ·Hayman Harri sonv ille.
Mr . and Mr s. Clarence and family. Westerville, 0.,
Frances May King of
Henderson , Mrs . Osie Mae and Mr. and Mrs . Tom Rolland ha s been in hospital
Follrod and son Stephen, at- Gruenveld, Columbus. visited wilh a broken ankle suffered in
tended the wedding of thei r with Mr. and Mrs. Joe BisselL a bicycle accident.
niece Jennifer Wright . in
Mr. and Mrs. Bill Thurston
·Zanesville, 0 ., Sunday af· spent seve ral days at
ternoon.
Columbus.
Clair E. Follrod, daughter
Mrs. Jack Stalzer and
Kathy , Nina Rol!!nson and fa mily. Columbus. visited with
Clara Follrod attended the Mr . and Mrs. Hank Holter.
Follrod family Reunion, at Ash
Mr . and Mrs . David Smith
Cave, Sunday, Aug . 20.
and family and Nancy Baun1 .
Relatives from Columbus. Chester. spe nt a day recenlly
Chillicothe and Chesapeake at Kings Island near Cinattended funeral rites for Fred cinnati, Ohio.
Honacher, at White 's funeral
- Violet Smith
home, also at Burlingham
BY BERTHA PARKER
Cemetery, last Wednesday .
Sabbath Sclluul attendance
Many relatives and local
Aug. 20 at tl1e Free Methodist
friend s called at Whi le 's
Church was Ill. Offering for
Monday evening, Tuesday, and
lhe day was $179.811.
in
Veterans
Mem orial
Tuesday evening also.
Mr. and Mrs. Harry Weber.
Hosp
ii&lt;JI.
Room
119.
Mr.
and
Sunday dinner guests of Mr.
Bu ckeye Lake, ca ll ed on Mrs .
and Mrs. Vere Swartz were : Mrs. Delbert Yost of Sugar Ge1•rgia Diehl rece ntly.
Mr. and Mrs. Richard Swartz Grove are at the Guthrie home
Mr . and Mrs . Vern Story.
and sons, of Ravenna , 0 . and for a few days .
C&lt;~lumbus. spent Wednesday
Herman Taylor was brought wilh Mr. and Mrs. Norman
nephew Gary Hale, also of
Ravenna. Sarah' Woode of from Holzer Hospital to the Schaefer and their son. John.
Coolville, 0 ., and Mr. and Mrs. home of a nephew, Mr. and wh" is spending !he summer
Mrs . Robert Bernard recently . wilh his grandparents.
Millard Swartz, local.
Other recent guests of the He is improved somewhat at
Mrs. Ctora Ren sha w has
Swartz' were : Roy Van Meter this writing. Mrs. • Herman returned home after spending
of Detroit, Mich. Wednesday Taylor was admitted to the seve ral mon ths wilh her
evening guests were Mr. and Elmwood Rest Horne on daughter and family, St.
Mrs. Emmett Hawk and,J . M. Monday.
Albans, W. Va . Her son. Mr.
The Ella Yost home is now Olen Rife, Col umbus, is staying
Bentz of Hemlock Grove, 0 .
Mrs. Genevieve Guthrie is occupied by renters, Mr. and wi lh his mother, Mrs. Ren·
ho,P.tallzed, with pneumonia, Mrs . Terry Deem.
shaw.·

ARNOLD
BROTHERS

·Long Bottom
Social

Note~

Laurel Oiff

News Notes

1970 DODGE
S219S
Potara, factory air condi tioning, V -8 engine, automatic
transm ission , power steering, power brakes,_good white
side -walls, many more ex tra s. Wh ite finish, black vinyl
r-(ll")f. Pr iced to move!
1910 FORD
,
St99S
Gataxie 500 hardtop COi.JtJe, V-8 engine, automatic transmis sion. power steering &amp; brakes. white fin ish, black
vi nyl top, vinyl inter ior , White-wall tires, like new. radio.
1911 FORD PINT02 DR.
st8SQ
Local 1 owner car, green finish, clean interior . good tires.
2000cc engine, radio, 4-speed trans .

Pom•roy Motor Co.

B.usiness ·Services·

....

SMILE BIG!!

eiWOFING
•HEATING
•PLUMBING
•CARPENTRY
e~i'OlJ',

H'd:l

ePAlNTING
For Free Estimate
PHONE 992-2550

EX_PERT
WhtJet·Alignment' ·

ss.ss

On Most American CaJ:t_ .1
- GU~. RANTEEO­

Phone 992-2094

Pomeroy Ho.me· &amp; Auto
.
Open a Til 5
Monday thru Saturday
606 E. Main , Pomeroy, Q..

8.· 7'

From the tar9est
Bulldo{er Rcidiator to
Smalle~t Hea ter Core
Nathan Biggs
Radiator Specialist

~-,·u·J

LA~ :.-. r~'""·

SMITH NELSON
MOIDRS. INC.
992-2174
Pomeroy

IN A LANGUAGE l
J.Q. KNOWS S1~
LANGUAGES

WHAT AMI

~-----::::==:::::n:====ln

SUPPOSED
10 00?

NOT Gfi5TT05SE!

Ph ,

FOf Sale

'

HAI2 ... HAI2 ...

ABNER

G·GOO'EI'IE

Ho... Ho...

AH IS PERSONALL'/
DELIVER IN" MAH

!XlGPATCH.'!

TH'BOARDO'HEALTH GAVE
AH'LL
U5 UNTIL MAWNIN' T"CLEAN PUT MAH
UP THIS ECOLOGICAL ~_...., LUNCH
HAZARD -WHATEVER
DOWN THAT IS -

SKULL TOTH'
MOOSEUM -

r-------

~-----

WINNIE WINKLE
I'D liKE ID DRIVE YCU
AND \OUR FAMILY
HOME , MI55 ,.,.---;11'

AMAZIN36TAMINA 1 M155 WINKLE I
A F.EW DAY$1 AND YOU'LL
BE A:; GOOD A:l NeW!
){)tJ HAVE

YOU'R:O A HERO. MISS
WINKLE

I

ALL :JF US ARE

VERY PROUD OF YOU I

WINK LE!

GASOUNE ALLEY

Heh! He'G so ..
.;oft and cuctdl4!

Here,now! l

Pertsie miqht just
have somethinq for
a nice Iittle bear

M~ word! ,---;;::,

Do ~ou like

peanut
and jelll.J

like
40U!

®

. ~ WJ;1/~ .
CH~ /,IOC~

SttJCe '/Oll

l

MAARW

~'?

"-I ,..,

In

1968
5. Flew

Virgil B. Teaford, Sr. ·Broker

,.

---·-··

'-----------.:::
~.;;•m::=."-"""""""' "T.M . .... w. '"'· 011.

ACROSS
1. Net
champ

---~~~~

·iJN YOUR DIAL

RATIIJ'&gt;,

Yesterday's Cryptoquo~: I WISH MY DEADLY FOE NO
WORSE THAN WANT Of FRIENDS, AND EMPTY PURSE.NICHOLASBRETON
(C 1972 Xlnr Features Syndicate, Inc. )

-~~~~~-

WMP0/1390.

MY ~~~s oor,

M~ CPED\T

JroiFTlliG Tf!~ !!Wi'!G MJLLIOHAJR E AS
THOUGH HE WEHr Jill lliF!!HT. THF;
M!lr! OF THE FOREST STRIDES FRDM
THE CAR !liTO !HE DARK SILEUCE OF
1'1![ TREES "'

------

------

1t'1 cAlltJb HA61TS,
M~ GAI/I~ ,ll(Dti!.lf,
M'l \lei(EIJD~, .

~~~~~~-

------

1-0 I I'l-l 1/\d&lt;E
UI'E " I.AJE MCIJI£!

I

NEW HOMES
3 BEDROOMS

We talk to you
like il peiSOn.

·· ~ - ~~---.

MAW:s FIX IN ' TO
lAKE YORE PITCHER

I

· SEPTIC tanks cleaned. Miller
Sanltalion. Stewart. Ohio. Pn.
EARTH MOVING
662·3035.
OPEN EVES. 8:00 f'.M.
GAME chickens ; phone 992-5084
2-12.tfc
Dozer &amp; End loade r wor·k,
1'!)MEROY, OHIO
aHer 5 p .m .
ponds, basement, land 8-23 -3tc OOZE tl and back hoe work. scaping. We have 2 size
- -- - - ponds and septic lanks; B &amp; K dozers, 2 size loaders. Work
Autc ·· .; ·&gt; ·
Noti ce
El(cavating, Phone 992-5367, done by hour or conlract .,
PAINT OAMAGE . 1912 Zig ·Zag
Dick
Karr , Jr.
PIANO &amp; o rgao~ lessons by "69 PLYMOUTH GTX 2 d'
sewi ng machines. Still in
5-21 -tfc Free Estimates. We also
graduat e of Cin ( inn.=tli
origina
l
cartons
.
No
at
t.tard top wi.th automatic
haul fill dirt, top soi l. Dump
Conservatory of Music w1lh 23
ta chments needed as our SEWING MAtHJNES. Repair, trucks and low-boy for hire .
tran smission. viny l top , all
yPars tea ching experience ,
tinted glass, fa ctory Stere6 · con tro ls are buill-in . Sews
service, all makes. 992-2284. See Bob or Rog er JQffers,
phone 9913825.
tape player and ot her ex tras, · with 1 or 2 needles, makes
The Fabric Shop, Pomeroy. Pomeroy . Phon e 992-3525
8 23 121 c
sew
on
buttons,
buttonholes,
good condition ; phone 949·
Aulhorized Singer Sal"' and
monograms, and bl ind hem
4141 or see Benny Wil son,
Service.
We Sharpen Scissors.· after 7 p.m. or phone 992YARD Sn te, Fridt~y nnd
slitch. Full cash price, 138.50
Main St ., Racine .
3·29-llc. 5232 .
Saturda y, Aug . 25 and 26, 3
or budget plan ava ilable.
111itcs fr om Lang svi lle on
Phone 992-56Al.
Rnutc 325, 7th house up . Nice
8-186tc AUTOMOBILE insurance been ' SEPTIC TANKS CLEANED
'
,
..
,
cancelled?
Lost
your REASONABL E rates . Ph . 446
clothing
Fo 1 1 •
operator's license? Call 992- 4782 , Gallipoli s, John Russell,
8 2J-31p
VACUUM Cleaner new 1912
1970 HO NDA CL70 Scra mbler, model . CDjTiplete wilh all
2966.
Owner &amp; Operator .
HE LEN 'S B-A_ B
_e_a_u_ly
- Shop.
exce llent cond iti on; phone cleaning tools. Small paint
6·1S·Ifc
'
5-1 2·fi C
9B5 38 16.
Tupper s Pla ins. Ohio ; there
damage in shipping. Will take
8-2J.61p S27 cash or budget plan PRICE CONSTRUCTION. C. BRADFORD. Auct ioneer
are two ot us now! Coot oft
rooting. porch repair and
wit h a " free " hair con avai la ble . Phone 992·5641.
Complete Service
electrical; phone 742 -4286.
di lio ner . Sept . Special. HOT PO INT se ll -defrosting
Phone 949 -3821
8·
18-61c
refrigerator, very good
Regu lar $12 .50 Mink Oil Wav e
8-16-30ic
Racine, Ohi o
condi ti o.n, phone 992-3061 .
lor SlO : Closed Monday s;
'Crill Bradford
8·23-3tc
BACKHOE AND DOZER work .5-1-lfc
open evenings by ap ·
-Septic tanks Installed. Georqe
---Price
Smash!
pointment . Helen {No . 1)
lBill) Pulll~s. Phone 992·2478 ' •S EE us FOR Awn ings. slorm
Dorst, owner . 667 3966 ; Helen FOR YOUR health 's sake eat
organ icafI y gr own tomatoe s;
1 No 21 Newland , ope ral or.
4-25-tfc
doors and windows, carport 5,
PANTS &amp; JEANS
B. Quisenberry has large
667 6306
---------marquees, aluminum siding
a 23-31p ones. lOc pound at the old Post
SEWING Machine Service, and ra iling . A. Jacob. sa les
Office bui lding , Syr acuse.
SALE I
clean , oil, adjust, $399, in your
r epresentative . For fr ee1
Ohio
LOSE weight with New Shape
home
;
phone
992-5331.
e"
s timates , ph one Charles
Buy 2 Pairs and
8·23·121 p
Tablet s. 10 day supply only
-30tc
Lis
le, Syra cuse, V . V.
8-11
GET I PAIR FREE
5 1. 4q at DuH on Drug Co ..
J ohnson and Son, Inc.
Middlepor t. and Nelson Drug ZIG ZAG sewing machi ne, th is All kinds, all sizes for men,
3·2·11•:
machine is dressmaker 1 women, young men, bvys
Store, Pomeroy .
Real
Estat~ For Sale
~----model. lh is ma ch ine makes
CONVENIENT but sec luded O"DEL L WHEEL alignmenl
buttonholes , darns, em · and gir ls. Hurr y to .. .
MEIGS SENIORS - Call now
located a l Crossroads. Rl. ~24 .
building _lots at Rock Spr ing s,
br oi deri es ;
take
over
POMEROY
lor appointment to have your
Complete front end serv ~ce,
close
to
High
School
&amp;
Fair
SEN IOR PORTRAIT ta ken.
payment s ol $5.10 or pay $6 a / Y•. Jack w. Carsey, Mgr. ;
tune up and brake se rv1ce
Ground; call or see Bill Witte ,
Portrail 5 wi lt be taken
mon th ; cal l 992 -5331.
~
Phone992-2181
Wheels
balan ced
elec
992-2189
aller
5
p.m.
week
·
8 23 6lc
Wednesday. Aug . 23rd lhru
Ironi ca ll y.
All
wor k
days.
Sa t ., Aug. 26th. Grover's
guaranteed .
RP.:~~ ,.n n.=.hl o
8-6-30ic
Studio. phone 992 -2475, DELUXE 8 track Stereo in COAL, Limestone, E)(celsior
i-ates
.
Phone
742
32J2 or
Salt Works, E. Main St ..
Walnut Console ; will se ll for
Middleport, Ohio
992
-3213.
/ · l! · Tl (
Pomeroy,
Phone
992
·3891
.
balan ce due of $88.21 or pay
8·16.9lc
4·12-lfc
$6 .10 a month ; ca ll 992-5331.
READY -MIX
CONCRE TE
8-23·61c
del ive red right to your
CO NTEMPORARY Conso le
Heip Wanted
project . Fas t and easy . Free
stereo, AM·FM radio , 4 speed
19 FT. HOLIDAY Rambler
esti
mates . Phone 997 JISJ
EXPERIENCED
cnr pen ter. Tr a vel
changer.
4
speaker
sound
Tra iler .
self Goegl e in Read y Mix Co .. .
Phone 99?-3918.
syste m . Wa lnut veneer
contained, sleeps sil(, exMiddleport , Ohi o.
,
ca binet. Balance $67 .32. Use
8·11-6lc cellent condition ; phone 6676-30
ti
c
2
New
Homes
,
all
electric,
3
ou'
budget
plan
.
Call992·1085
.
3400.
...
.
bedrooms, full basement and
8·18·61 c
BABYSITTER lor 3 children in
8-20-6tc
TUN
E
UPS.
brake
jobs and
wifh
lake
lrontage;
garage.
my home . phone 992-3645 - - - - - - - - -othe r aut o work . Very
atter 8:30p .m. or before ll APPLES Fitzpa trick Orchards, MAPLE stereo -rad io com at Five Points area .
reasonabl e rat es . Wa11"1es
a.m
bina ti on, AM-FM rad io, 4
State Route 689 . Phone
Auto Service, school !rained
speed changer , 4 speaker
8-2J.61c
Wilkesville 669 -3785.
Roule I. Shade. Ohio 992 -65-1/ ,
soun d system . Balance $72.55.
8-17.10tc
PH. 992-2571
next to Whaley' s Paint Shop .
SA LESMAN wan ted, lull or
Use our budget lerms . Call
8 20 -121c
part tim e eve ning s. car CANNING
992 -1085.
tomatoes and
OR
992-3975
necessary. Dr op a card· with
B
·18-6tc
mangoes . Geraldine Cleland,
name. address, age and p~1on e
Racine , Otlio.
Real Estate For Sale
num ber to Mr . Foss, P. 0 .
B 16-lf c SUMMER clearance of pattern FOR SALE by owner. Yellow
Box 4133, Cincinnati, Ohio
frame house, six rooms and
books ar"!d imported yarns.
J520 4
balh . Large lot. Located in ·
MOBILE Home oil furna ce.
Needlecralt Shop. Rl . 124
Syracuse on Rt . 124. Second
tank . etc.; phone 992-5241 .
East. Syracuse. 10 a.m. to 7
CLELAND
house on left going north
8-22-61p p.m. daily except Sunday .
inside
corporat
ion
line.
ALL ABOARD HOUSEWIVES.
REALTY
8· fO.tfc
608 E. Main
7·27 -tl
ENROLL BY SEPT . 25th . AKC registered miniature - - - - - Pomeroy , Oh io
Las t chance to hop aboard the Schnauzers . Ph . 4&lt;16·2497.
puppies. Silver Toy. 7 ROOM house and bath , new ly
8·22 -121 c POODLE
PLAYHOUSE TOY !ra in lo
Park view Kennels, Phone 992·
painted,
Un ion
Ave. ,
success . We 're sellin g toys
5443.
80 ACRES
Pomeroy, phone 992·5641 .
and booking parti es, having BOAT , motor, trai ler and ac
B-15-ffc .
8-22-blp 11? story fram e home, l
fun and getting pa id. As a cessones. i1250 ; phone 992
room s, bath , barn 3BK50,
demo I hav e no delivering , no 9981.
varieties ol lop ALL . ELECTRIC hom e. 2 impl ement bui ld ing , chicken
collecti on, and I do not need
8-22-3tc SEVERAL
quality, tree r ipened, cann ing
bedroom , utility room , kit . house , 40 ldlabl e ocres.
any exper ience . I gel free
peaches ; now ava ilable
chen, dinirig area. bath, large CLOSE TO NEW MINE .
training Final deadline for YAMAHA 250 Enduro. 8 months
through early September;
living room with wall -to-wall
hiri ng is Sept. 25, call me now, old, Norge ele ctric range. like
20 ACRES
Bob's Market , Mason, W. Va .,
carpeting, air -conditioning ,
don ' t wait. Margaret Fortune. new . Phone 992 -7109.
above
the
Pomeroy
-Mason
Moden
hom
e, 3 bedroom s,
garage , plenty of water ,
9-.l9-5414 or Barbara La mbert ,
8·21 6tc
Bridge ; phone 773·5308.
bath,
ca
rpeted,
furn is hed,
draper ies and rods included ;
4463411.
=--~------8·15-tfc
ALSO
income
proper
ly, 2
Permastone
Stucc
o
and
8 22 -tfc FORCED air furnace , com
outside ; s miles South of
bedroom s. bath. furn ished
---------pl ete, stoker fired , all control s
Ka iser Aluminum on Rt . 2; rented. 4 bedrooms, some
and piping ; phone 882·3182 .
Wanted To Buy
Mobile
Hom~s
For
Sale
phone
89S·3886. Ml . Alto, W. paneling. FREE GAS TO
8·22-3tp
Va .
ALL OF THE ABOVE .
OLD Furn!ture, oak ta bles. ANTI QUE sew ing mach 1ne
8-22-31c
10 ACRES
organ s, d1s hes, clocks, brass
'
• Air Conditioners
Honeymoon rre adle , TAP ,
l
bedroom
home, dinin g
bed s, or complete households . sews good. phone 742 5735.
8 ROOM h6use. balh. large lot.
• Awnings
Write M. D. Miller, Rf . 4.
room
,
balh,
full
basement ,
gas and electric, phone 992 8·22 ·31 c
Pomeroy, Ohio. Ca ll 992-6271 .
2602.
• Underpinning
por che s, 2 sma ll buildings .
6·28-llc 1910 ALLIS.CHALMER S HD -21
ON GOOD BLA CK TOP
8-22-61p
B. SN IOSII56 Hyd . full U Complete mobile hom~ · :;1--;R:-;0:-;0:cM=s-. --:c
p-:-;,--;b-a.,-1h:-,- 655 ROAD .
service - plus gigant ic
blade SN 6381.21.000 Mark II
3.05 ACRES
For Rent
Sycamore St.. Middleport ;
engine, enc losed Allen canopy "display of mobile homes ,
3
bedrooms,
bath, uti lity
pri
ce
$8,000
;
call
after
4
p.m.
4 ROOM unfurnished apartment cab . Good condition , ready to
always available at ...
room
.
la
rg
e
patio,
garage,
992-5083.
and bath, upstairs over wo rk ; 104 Galion Grader· SN
frui
t
storage,
fru
it
trees,
8-23-3tc
double garage ; located in GMP 20796, good condition.
MILLER
grape s, berri es , chi cken
Pome r oy,
references ready to work . Inquire by
house, 3 bedrooms and
requi red . Phone 992·5293 .
house, pony pen, AL L IN
dialing J . W. Ashton ,
MOBILE HOMES . 2 STORY
bath , new fuel oil furnace ,
8-1111c Columbus l6141 48~- 9546 day s
GRASS EXCEPT GAROEN
plenty of water. 10 acres.
122o Washington Blvd.
SPACE .
or (61 4) 457 0659 evenings and
about
10 miles from Pomeroy
423·7521
BELPRE,O.
HOUSE TRAILER on Long weekends .
INSPE CT
THESE
on 681 ; phone 992-6545.
Street in Rutland ; phone 742·
8·22-6tc
PROPERTIE S BEFORE
8·23-3tc
.td63.
SCHOOL STARTS.
8·23-31c 1969 HONDA 70cc , e)(cellent CASH paid lor all mal&lt;es and - - -- - models
of
mobile
homes
.
HENRY E. CLELAND Sr .
RAC IN E - 6 room house, bath ,
condition , pool tabl e, 7 ft .
Phone area code 614·423-9531.
3 BEDROOM trai ler on large tot long, 4 ft. wi de, 6 pc . Din ette
REALTOR
llftlity room, garage, $10,000 .
·
~1~1fc
in Shade : phone 696-1283.
992-22S9
•, hone 9A9·A195.
Set . Phone 742-5641.
3·31 li e
8· 18·6fp
II no an swer 992-2568
8·20·6tc
FOR THE BEST deal in a new
3 ROOM apartment. un
or used mobile hom e, try
furn is hed. 408 Spring Ave ., CANNING tomatoes . $1.25
Kanauga Mobile Home Sales,
pi cked. Mangoes. Raymond
Pomeroy .
Kanauga, Ohio.
Rowe , Yellow Bush Rd .,
7. t6·301c
8·10.If c
Racine. Phone 949 -3746.
8·17·6tc
3 AND 4 ROuM furnished an'd
Real Estate For Sale
un furni shed apartments .
110 Mechanic Stree t
FENDER
P.
A.
System
.
100
:&gt;hone 992·5434.
RACINE - 10 room houii!;&lt;
bath, basement, garage, two
4-12-tlc · watts RMS, 2 columns, 8·10"
speakers with covers , $595 ;
Pomeroy, Olt~o 45769
lots . Phone 949-4313.
Fender Showman amp. 15" D
4·5·tfp
Auto Sales
140 JBL speaker with covers , - - - - $450 ; Fender Bandmaster
'RENOVATEO
1965 CHEVELLE Ma libu , S49S ;
5 ROOMS and bath . ap .
Amp
.
2-23
'"
0120
JBL
3
BEDROOMS
Bath,
charming breaklasl noo k. Ul ilily
1969 Oldsmob ile, S1,89S ; speakers, . with reverb, with
proximately I acre of grovnd .
room
and
nice
~itchen.
All carpeted. Lovel y concr ete
phone 992·5186.
Phone 949·3633.
covers, $575 ; Two Shure
front
porch.
Vinyl
siding
lor lltlle Ma in lenan ce. Mid.
8·20-6tc
8·17-.llc
microphones with cases, $40
die port .
each plus stands and boom;
DOWNTOWN
'
,
1969 PLYMOUTH GTX. good
Goy a guitar,
standard, HOUSE In Long Boflom. phone
condition ; phone 992-7624.
985·3529.
3 BEDROOMS- Bath, fireplace with bookshelves al each
sunburst fin ish with case,
8·22-Jip 1125; Custom Built Teardrop
end, and bullt· ln stereo. Gas f~rced air furna ce. Full
6·11 ·1fc
bass I Fender style neck I
basement with garage and J rooms . Block garage on extra
1910 OLOSMOB ILE 98 . ex - · "C ap~ a in America" finish IDEAL S·ACRE RANCH . Lake
lot. Asking only 121.000.00.
Conchas. New Mexico. 12.975.
cellent condition , 1 lady
with case. 5140 ; Light system,
OPPORTUNITY
No Down . No Interest. $25 mo.
owner . Phone 247 -2844.
2 bla ck lights. 4·150 walt
BUSINESS
BUILDING
- and a modern 3 bedroom air
fo r 119 mos . Vacation
8·20·61p spots, indiv idual adjustment ,
home.
Wood
burning firepla ce In livi ng . All
conditioned
Paradise , Free Brochure.
intensity con'trof, meta l Cdse.
rooms
paneled.
Young
pine
trees and nice view of the Ohio
Lake
Conchas:
Box
Ranchos
1195 ;
CHOPPER,
1969
River.
A
real
good
buy.
$25.000.00.
2001DD.
Alameda
,
California
Harley -Davidson, " Custom
94501.
OVER7 ACRES
Springer."' '" Electric Start,'"
8·6·301p
ON ROUTE 7- With plains water lap. Mostly cleared and
" Polished Cases, " " Drag
Exhavsts," e)(tenslve
ready for house construction. Asking 110.000.00.
chrome,
many
custom CHESHIRE. 5 rooms &amp; bafh,
TUPPERS PLAINS
basement, l lf.o~ Acre. 10
goodies , $2,795 ; - cal l Eric'
NICE
J
bedrOom
home with large closefs. Large living
rtlinutes from Gavin; storm
Chambers 992·S31k\ aller 5
and
kitchen,
plus
utility.
Concrete fronl porch. Nearly an
windows, newly remodeled ;
p.m.
acre
of
nice
laying
land.
Want S16,000.00.
carpeled dining area, large
8·18-6fp
living room; call after S:JO
weekdays, Saturday &amp;
NOW IS THE TIME TO CALL US TO LIST. PRICES ARE .
60 H. P. SCOTT . outboard,
Sunday, 367·7114.
,
GOOD AND THE DEMAND IS INCREASING. WE WILL
complete controls·, tanks and
8·18-10fc
TREAT YOUR PROPERTY AS IF IT WERE OURS.
spare propeller; French
prov:ncial youth bed with
HELEN L. TEAFORD, ASSOCIATE
sheels; phone 992-7201 after 5 5 ROOM house on SO' x 100' lot ;
992·3325
p.m.
call 9'12·5786.
8·20·4tp
8·1B·6tc
I

NOW, lATER---

Pom•roy
Motor Co.

2 SIGII~
OF
QUALITY

BARNEY

CALASOZO, TH~ R:&gt;I'UlAR
I&lt;EFCJR" CROWP ALREAI'Y
HAS GOSSIP ON THE
THAT JIM-JUSTIN

ONE OF THEIR

c.;;.··;;;._,~

IN A FIT Of

ofT
the
handle
10. Sonny's
partner
11, Stringent
1z: Frost
13. Click
beetle
14. Earth
(obs.)
15. Aunt
(Sp.)
16. Wutten·
berg
measure
1'1. Fortune
19. Bird"s
nest
20. Roll
call
answer
21. - on
· (love
to
excess)
ZZ. Lena
of

36. Company
37. Guaranty;
pledge
38. French
river
39. Irascible
40. Nurtured
DOWN
1. Felt a
twinge
2. Coast
3. Psychia·
trists

Yeaterday's AnsWer
8. Hermit
26. 1937 and
9. Ridiculed
1938
11. Fishing
Oscar
net
winner
15. Exhaust
28. Friend·
18. Conduce
ship
21. Sur29. High·
realist
strung
painter
30. Destroyed
22. Most cozy
35. Make
23. Delayed
captive
24. Electrical
36. Boxer
term
Foster

(sl.)

(2wds.)
4. Blunder
5. Team

race
6. Poly-

nesian
beverage
7. Annoy
- (sl.)

(4wds.)

aJ I I
['iTUCCA

~

tCUIMPE

R

) I

FORK OUT FOR
A TRIP TO

I LJ

J I IJ I

THE FA!i1 EA5T 1

Now arranre the circled letters

to form the 1urprise anAwer, u

IUir&lt;•ted by the aLove cartoon.

I ..... --... I t I 111111 I I J
(AIIIlfe ... tomorrow)

Jumbl•" IROOD
Ynlerda1'•

song

24. Dimin·
ished
25. Latin
poet
26. Story
27. Troops
ZB. Theatrical
performer
31. Exasper·
ate
32. Floor
covtring
33. Biddy
34. Para·
disiaoal

•uzzy

SWIIVE

\ An•"'"' : Wha1•1 n•ehd for n durt
1rm~el?- "FAll"

.
111

JARGON
,

I t~r

.

f.n,r~&gt;r"

o

-

IT PR06A6L'/ FLOAT£0 CLEAR
ACROSSltJ TflE OTflER SIDE
FTHE WORLD W~ERE ANOTHER
LITTLE KID FOUND IT AND 1!5
PLA'&lt;'JN6 il.l!TK IT...

DAILY CRYPTOQUOTE- Here's how to work It: .
A X·Y D L BAA X R
is LONGFELLOW
One letter si mply stands for another. In this sample A is
used for the thrc• L"s. X for the two O's, etc. ·single letters.
apostrophes, the length and formation of the words are oil
hints. Each day (he code letters arc different.
CRYPTOQUOTES
VriN

ATPM

PSFI(OVNL,
VDSV"J

QFLN
S 1U

BAL

VDN

TSIRVM

AIPM

RJ

BSFPV
I

PSFKDSEPN R·J TSIRVM .- DNILR

ENLK .IAI.

LUCKY KID!!

�.. -

..

.

•

.~.

18 - The Duily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 .• Au~ust 2:1, 1972

,

-

Sentinel Classifieds Get Action! Sentinel Classzfieds Get Results!
·WANt ADS
INFORMATION
. OEAD\.INES

Card of Thanks

) P .M .. Day Before Pubt!cation·. WE WISH to ~xten d our"si n cer~
Monday Deadline. 9 a .m .
lllt=~nks to the Ewing Funeral
Cancel lation - Corrections
Home . Rev . Dwight Zavit z,
Will be. accepted unti l 9 a .m . tor. Sy rt=~cusl;.' La di es AuJCiliary :
Day ot Publication
fr iends and r elat i ve s for th e
REGULATIONS
beautiful floral otf er ings, food
Tht Publisher reserv es the
right to ed!t or r eject any ads. · and cards; the ones that
he lped in any way during th e
deemed
objectional.
T he
publ isher will not be r espon sible
l im e of sickness and death of
for moi't&gt; than
Insertion .

·'

our doughier and sister, Mr s.

one in correct

Mar ie Donovan . Your kind
ness will rlever be lorg 0tten.
Walter Cook andfami!y
8 73 lip

RATES

·For Wan, Ad Serv ice
scents per word 'one insertion
Minimum Charge 75c '
12 cents per word th ree
consecutive i nsert ioris .
18 cents per word six con·

-------- - - - Lost

secutive insertions . ,

ads and ads paid within 10 day s."

CARD OF THANKS
&amp; OBITUARY

51.50 tor 50 word minimum .
Each additional word 2c
BLIND ADS
Addit iona l 2Sc Charge per
Advertisemen t .
OFFICE HOURS 1:
: 8: 30a .m. to S: OO, p.m• Dall'f ,
8 : 30 a .m . to 12: 00 Noon

Saturday ,

AIJ;·ed
Soda[

.'\.ote.~

eyeg ta sse:. . in
vicinity of Veterans Hosp1taL
it found cal l 992 -7791 alter 4
p.m.

WOMAN 'S

25 Per Cent Oiscoi.Jn t on pa id

Notice

CALL US FIRST
AND.SAVE $ $
No Job Too Large
Or Too Small

Commercial
Residential
Exterior
Interior
Sandblasting
Brush - Roller
Air- Air less
Spray

GHEEN BROTHERS
PAINT CONTRACTORS

NOTICE
I WILL NOT 'be i-esponsible for
any · :debts contra cted by
anyone other than myself .
Signed, Donald E. Whaley ,
Rf. 1, Shade. Oh io.
8-22·3tp
REWARD , lor shopping at
Showalter's Wet Pet Shop,
Chester, Ohio· 10 per cent of
your total purchase may be
appl ied to the purchase of any
ceram ic items .
'8 2·30tp

Coli 949·3295 - 949-4651
After 6

''HEI L"
HEAHNG &amp;
COOLING

Sunday School attendance on
Window
August 20 was 37, the offering
A1r Conditioners
KOSCOT KOSMETICS and
$19.30. Worship services were
wigs, more new product s
t-h : Wa :er Heaters
held at II o'clock with atcoming soon. Fnr free
Pl umb1ng
dem ons tration . phone 992 tendance 18. the Rev. Lehman
5113.
c
lec
:ncal
Work
speaking from Hosea I :2-10,
8-11 1fc
··Go" . '"A Challenge"' - "God
does not send us alone, he goes
YARD Sa le, 203 Butternut Ave.,
with us."
Pomeroy , Ohio ; " A few an tiques. antique bottles. and
Several from here attended
misce ll aneous
items ,"
the Homecoming at Orange on
Saturday , August 26th and
Ni n 1a
&amp;mday, Aug . 20. The afSunday, August 27th .
Po1neroy
. 0.
ternoon program featured the
82221p
"Flowers Brothers Quartet ..
from Parkersburg. W. Va.
Charles Domigan, pastor and
Mike Haseltqn of Middleport,
spoke and sang. ·Mr. and Mrs.
Harrisonville
Chas. D. Woode sang. "Till the
Slorm Passes Over. ' ' And
s()('it•h ~cw~
there
were
many
•
congregational
nwnbers.
Several churches and pla ces
were represented .
Weekend gucsls of Mr. and
Alfred Church .will have its
Mrs. EdwHrd P. King were
annual Homecom in g on
Mr. and Mrs. David Dailey rlwir daughter , Leota Norris.
Sunday, Sept. 17, fea turing 1De bbie Hauber 1 are an- S• ·n Jil lllll )", Toni, twr1
"The Revelations Quartet" n, •un cin g the birth of a daughters w1d friends and
from Athens, 0., and other daughter , Ray Lyn. Ma - g1·anddaughter Patty GIJOdin,
home and local talent.
ternal grandparents are all 11f Akr'IJn. They visited
The Alfred Women's ~ociety Mr . i!nd Mrs. Junior Hauber fri ends in Pomeroy and alsu
held its regular meeltng on Hnd mate rnal grandpar ents called r1n Mr. cmd · Mr-.; .
Tuesday evening. Aug . 15, at ilre Mr . and Mrs. ~'red Frankl in King and Sims. Billy ,
the home of Nellie Parker, with Lark ins .
FnHlkie .Jr ., Rod ney and
an ill ttendance of 9 members.
Mr . ilnd Mrs. David Smith Vincen 1, Mr. and Mrs. William
The meeting, in charge of and David. Dee Dee and Nancy .L King and da ughters. Mary.
Nellie Parker, President Baum, Ches ter, were viSiting Cindy, Mr. and Mrs. Jack
'lpened wilh prayer by Thelma Mr . and Mrs. Tom Drake. Kin gs and suns and daughter,
Henderson . The song " He 0 Jiumbus.
Jack Jr., Jeffery . Jennifer. all
Understands" was sung.
Mr . and Mrs . Lawrence 11f Harrisonvi lle and Mr.
Sixteen siok and shut.in calls Chevalier and granddaughter, Charles King and daughter,
were reported.
Walla ce. W. Va .. spent a Susan Mari e and Mr. and Mrs.
Letters were read from weekend with Mr. and Mrs . Edward J. King and so ns,
Beulah Ballard. Dis!. Pres. and Wayne Prince.
Jr,ey, Michael , and Tummy uf
Janice McGee, Dis!. Sec 'y .
Mr. and Mrs. Howard Young. Kingsbury Rr Jad .
Officers to be elected and in- Paden. City, W. Va . and Mr .
Guests tJf Mr. and Mrs.
stalled and reported to the Dis! and Mrs. Garth Smith were Edward P. King last week
Sec"y by Oct. I.
dinner guests of Mr. and Mrs. were Minnie Coles an d sons,
The Nominating Committee, Emmell Stcthem.
Wayne ond J ohn and daughter.
Isola Taylor. Florence Spencer
Mrs. Bonnie Meacham and
Mr and Mrs . Harold Holter
and Grace Swartz to report at and family and Mr. and Mrs . sun and daugh ter , Edward J.
the Sept. meeting.
Dav1d Smith and family were Coles and girl friend. all of
The District meeting, Sept. visiling Mr. and Mrs. Ll oy d AknJn visited the Kin gs also .
20, at the Nelsonville, U.M. McPeek. Belleville. W. Va .
They also visited Mr . and Mrs.
Church.
Mr . and Mrs .. George Fry. Orville Marks of Millfie ld and
A Worship mee ti ng on Parkersburg, W. Va . were £~11e ncled the Athens County
Wednesday, Oct. 25, in the visiting Mr. and Mrs. Harold Fair.
Athens U.M. Church .
Jim and Mill')' King and
New lun.
The West Ohio Conference
children
have moved from the
SC11!1 Hauber was visiting
meeting on Oct. 29, at Wor- recenlly with Mark Holter.
Edward J. Kin g farm to
thington. 0.
Donna Sissun, Vienna , W. Pomeroy .
Clara Follrod Jed the Va .. wa s visiting Serena
The Edward J . King fa rm
program on " Varieties of Sis,son.
has been sold to Mr . Joe Lubtrs
Service" from the Program
Mrs . Cora Emrick and Mrs. uf Ct,J umbus. ll is better kn own
Booklet "Leap In Faith. " Elwood Emrick, Lancaster, 0. as the old Frank King farm.
which was presented in were overnight guests of Mr .
Weekend guests of Will iam
dialogue from by Nellie and Mrs. Wayne Prin ce. They and Cledith
King and
Parker, Helen Woode, Nina ab1 , visiled with Mr . and Mrs. daughters. Mary and Cindy,
Robinson. Thelma Henderson, Frank Dorst.
were Cledith's mother, Mr s.
Osie Mae Follrod, Isola Taylor .
l.e 1,ta Johnson, Port la nd, Mary Marks of Athens.
June Stearns, and Osie Hen· visi led with Ethel Larkins.
SWlday guests uf Mr . and
derson .
Mr. and Mrs. Millard Ball Mrs. _Ernesl Hudnall of Alban y
The next meeting to be held hav e moved to Portland , 0 .
were th eir daughter, Joan
on Tuesday evening, Sept. 19, Mr. and Mr s. Bill Kouse and King, and son·in-law. Ja ck
at the home of Isola Taylor , daughters. Chicago. IlL visited Kin g and their children , Ja ck
with everyone contributing to a wi lll Leuna Hensley.
Jr .. Jeffery. Jenni t'er J.ea of
prog ram .
Mr. and Mrs . Ted ·Hayman Harri sonv ille.
Mr . and Mr s. Clarence and family. Westerville, 0.,
Frances May King of
Henderson , Mrs . Osie Mae and Mr. and Mrs . Tom Rolland ha s been in hospital
Follrod and son Stephen, at- Gruenveld, Columbus. visited wilh a broken ankle suffered in
tended the wedding of thei r with Mr. and Mrs. Joe BisselL a bicycle accident.
niece Jennifer Wright . in
Mr. and Mrs. Bill Thurston
·Zanesville, 0 ., Sunday af· spent seve ral days at
ternoon.
Columbus.
Clair E. Follrod, daughter
Mrs. Jack Stalzer and
Kathy , Nina Rol!!nson and fa mily. Columbus. visited with
Clara Follrod attended the Mr . and Mrs. Hank Holter.
Follrod family Reunion, at Ash
Mr . and Mrs . David Smith
Cave, Sunday, Aug . 20.
and family and Nancy Baun1 .
Relatives from Columbus. Chester. spe nt a day recenlly
Chillicothe and Chesapeake at Kings Island near Cinattended funeral rites for Fred cinnati, Ohio.
Honacher, at White 's funeral
- Violet Smith
home, also at Burlingham
BY BERTHA PARKER
Cemetery, last Wednesday .
Sabbath Sclluul attendance
Many relatives and local
Aug. 20 at tl1e Free Methodist
friend s called at Whi le 's
Church was Ill. Offering for
Monday evening, Tuesday, and
lhe day was $179.811.
in
Veterans
Mem orial
Tuesday evening also.
Mr. and Mrs. Harry Weber.
Hosp
ii&lt;JI.
Room
119.
Mr.
and
Sunday dinner guests of Mr.
Bu ckeye Lake, ca ll ed on Mrs .
and Mrs. Vere Swartz were : Mrs. Delbert Yost of Sugar Ge1•rgia Diehl rece ntly.
Mr. and Mrs. Richard Swartz Grove are at the Guthrie home
Mr . and Mrs . Vern Story.
and sons, of Ravenna , 0 . and for a few days .
C&lt;~lumbus. spent Wednesday
Herman Taylor was brought wilh Mr. and Mrs. Norman
nephew Gary Hale, also of
Ravenna. Sarah' Woode of from Holzer Hospital to the Schaefer and their son. John.
Coolville, 0 ., and Mr. and Mrs. home of a nephew, Mr. and wh" is spending !he summer
Mrs . Robert Bernard recently . wilh his grandparents.
Millard Swartz, local.
Other recent guests of the He is improved somewhat at
Mrs. Ctora Ren sha w has
Swartz' were : Roy Van Meter this writing. Mrs. • Herman returned home after spending
of Detroit, Mich. Wednesday Taylor was admitted to the seve ral mon ths wilh her
evening guests were Mr. and Elmwood Rest Horne on daughter and family, St.
Mrs. Emmett Hawk and,J . M. Monday.
Albans, W. Va . Her son. Mr.
The Ella Yost home is now Olen Rife, Col umbus, is staying
Bentz of Hemlock Grove, 0 .
Mrs. Genevieve Guthrie is occupied by renters, Mr. and wi lh his mother, Mrs. Ren·
ho,P.tallzed, with pneumonia, Mrs . Terry Deem.
shaw.·

ARNOLD
BROTHERS

·Long Bottom
Social

Note~

Laurel Oiff

News Notes

1970 DODGE
S219S
Potara, factory air condi tioning, V -8 engine, automatic
transm ission , power steering, power brakes,_good white
side -walls, many more ex tra s. Wh ite finish, black vinyl
r-(ll")f. Pr iced to move!
1910 FORD
,
St99S
Gataxie 500 hardtop COi.JtJe, V-8 engine, automatic transmis sion. power steering &amp; brakes. white fin ish, black
vi nyl top, vinyl inter ior , White-wall tires, like new. radio.
1911 FORD PINT02 DR.
st8SQ
Local 1 owner car, green finish, clean interior . good tires.
2000cc engine, radio, 4-speed trans .

Pom•roy Motor Co.

B.usiness ·Services·

....

SMILE BIG!!

eiWOFING
•HEATING
•PLUMBING
•CARPENTRY
e~i'OlJ',

H'd:l

ePAlNTING
For Free Estimate
PHONE 992-2550

EX_PERT
WhtJet·Alignment' ·

ss.ss

On Most American CaJ:t_ .1
- GU~. RANTEEO­

Phone 992-2094

Pomeroy Ho.me· &amp; Auto
.
Open a Til 5
Monday thru Saturday
606 E. Main , Pomeroy, Q..

8.· 7'

From the tar9est
Bulldo{er Rcidiator to
Smalle~t Hea ter Core
Nathan Biggs
Radiator Specialist

~-,·u·J

LA~ :.-. r~'""·

SMITH NELSON
MOIDRS. INC.
992-2174
Pomeroy

IN A LANGUAGE l
J.Q. KNOWS S1~
LANGUAGES

WHAT AMI

~-----::::==:::::n:====ln

SUPPOSED
10 00?

NOT Gfi5TT05SE!

Ph ,

FOf Sale

'

HAI2 ... HAI2 ...

ABNER

G·GOO'EI'IE

Ho... Ho...

AH IS PERSONALL'/
DELIVER IN" MAH

!XlGPATCH.'!

TH'BOARDO'HEALTH GAVE
AH'LL
U5 UNTIL MAWNIN' T"CLEAN PUT MAH
UP THIS ECOLOGICAL ~_...., LUNCH
HAZARD -WHATEVER
DOWN THAT IS -

SKULL TOTH'
MOOSEUM -

r-------

~-----

WINNIE WINKLE
I'D liKE ID DRIVE YCU
AND \OUR FAMILY
HOME , MI55 ,.,.---;11'

AMAZIN36TAMINA 1 M155 WINKLE I
A F.EW DAY$1 AND YOU'LL
BE A:; GOOD A:l NeW!
){)tJ HAVE

YOU'R:O A HERO. MISS
WINKLE

I

ALL :JF US ARE

VERY PROUD OF YOU I

WINK LE!

GASOUNE ALLEY

Heh! He'G so ..
.;oft and cuctdl4!

Here,now! l

Pertsie miqht just
have somethinq for
a nice Iittle bear

M~ word! ,---;;::,

Do ~ou like

peanut
and jelll.J

like
40U!

®

. ~ WJ;1/~ .
CH~ /,IOC~

SttJCe '/Oll

l

MAARW

~'?

"-I ,..,

In

1968
5. Flew

Virgil B. Teaford, Sr. ·Broker

,.

---·-··

'-----------.:::
~.;;•m::=."-"""""""' "T.M . .... w. '"'· 011.

ACROSS
1. Net
champ

---~~~~

·iJN YOUR DIAL

RATIIJ'&gt;,

Yesterday's Cryptoquo~: I WISH MY DEADLY FOE NO
WORSE THAN WANT Of FRIENDS, AND EMPTY PURSE.NICHOLASBRETON
(C 1972 Xlnr Features Syndicate, Inc. )

-~~~~~-

WMP0/1390.

MY ~~~s oor,

M~ CPED\T

JroiFTlliG Tf!~ !!Wi'!G MJLLIOHAJR E AS
THOUGH HE WEHr Jill lliF!!HT. THF;
M!lr! OF THE FOREST STRIDES FRDM
THE CAR !liTO !HE DARK SILEUCE OF
1'1![ TREES "'

------

------

1t'1 cAlltJb HA61TS,
M~ GAI/I~ ,ll(Dti!.lf,
M'l \lei(EIJD~, .

~~~~~~-

------

1-0 I I'l-l 1/\d&lt;E
UI'E " I.AJE MCIJI£!

I

NEW HOMES
3 BEDROOMS

We talk to you
like il peiSOn.

·· ~ - ~~---.

MAW:s FIX IN ' TO
lAKE YORE PITCHER

I

· SEPTIC tanks cleaned. Miller
Sanltalion. Stewart. Ohio. Pn.
EARTH MOVING
662·3035.
OPEN EVES. 8:00 f'.M.
GAME chickens ; phone 992-5084
2-12.tfc
Dozer &amp; End loade r wor·k,
1'!)MEROY, OHIO
aHer 5 p .m .
ponds, basement, land 8-23 -3tc OOZE tl and back hoe work. scaping. We have 2 size
- -- - - ponds and septic lanks; B &amp; K dozers, 2 size loaders. Work
Autc ·· .; ·&gt; ·
Noti ce
El(cavating, Phone 992-5367, done by hour or conlract .,
PAINT OAMAGE . 1912 Zig ·Zag
Dick
Karr , Jr.
PIANO &amp; o rgao~ lessons by "69 PLYMOUTH GTX 2 d'
sewi ng machines. Still in
5-21 -tfc Free Estimates. We also
graduat e of Cin ( inn.=tli
origina
l
cartons
.
No
at
t.tard top wi.th automatic
haul fill dirt, top soi l. Dump
Conservatory of Music w1lh 23
ta chments needed as our SEWING MAtHJNES. Repair, trucks and low-boy for hire .
tran smission. viny l top , all
yPars tea ching experience ,
tinted glass, fa ctory Stere6 · con tro ls are buill-in . Sews
service, all makes. 992-2284. See Bob or Rog er JQffers,
phone 9913825.
tape player and ot her ex tras, · with 1 or 2 needles, makes
The Fabric Shop, Pomeroy. Pomeroy . Phon e 992-3525
8 23 121 c
sew
on
buttons,
buttonholes,
good condition ; phone 949·
Aulhorized Singer Sal"' and
monograms, and bl ind hem
4141 or see Benny Wil son,
Service.
We Sharpen Scissors.· after 7 p.m. or phone 992YARD Sn te, Fridt~y nnd
slitch. Full cash price, 138.50
Main St ., Racine .
3·29-llc. 5232 .
Saturda y, Aug . 25 and 26, 3
or budget plan ava ilable.
111itcs fr om Lang svi lle on
Phone 992-56Al.
Rnutc 325, 7th house up . Nice
8-186tc AUTOMOBILE insurance been ' SEPTIC TANKS CLEANED
'
,
..
,
cancelled?
Lost
your REASONABL E rates . Ph . 446
clothing
Fo 1 1 •
operator's license? Call 992- 4782 , Gallipoli s, John Russell,
8 2J-31p
VACUUM Cleaner new 1912
1970 HO NDA CL70 Scra mbler, model . CDjTiplete wilh all
2966.
Owner &amp; Operator .
HE LEN 'S B-A_ B
_e_a_u_ly
- Shop.
exce llent cond iti on; phone cleaning tools. Small paint
6·1S·Ifc
'
5-1 2·fi C
9B5 38 16.
Tupper s Pla ins. Ohio ; there
damage in shipping. Will take
8-2J.61p S27 cash or budget plan PRICE CONSTRUCTION. C. BRADFORD. Auct ioneer
are two ot us now! Coot oft
rooting. porch repair and
wit h a " free " hair con avai la ble . Phone 992·5641.
Complete Service
electrical; phone 742 -4286.
di lio ner . Sept . Special. HOT PO INT se ll -defrosting
Phone 949 -3821
8·
18-61c
refrigerator, very good
Regu lar $12 .50 Mink Oil Wav e
8-16-30ic
Racine, Ohi o
condi ti o.n, phone 992-3061 .
lor SlO : Closed Monday s;
'Crill Bradford
8·23-3tc
BACKHOE AND DOZER work .5-1-lfc
open evenings by ap ·
-Septic tanks Installed. Georqe
---Price
Smash!
pointment . Helen {No . 1)
lBill) Pulll~s. Phone 992·2478 ' •S EE us FOR Awn ings. slorm
Dorst, owner . 667 3966 ; Helen FOR YOUR health 's sake eat
organ icafI y gr own tomatoe s;
1 No 21 Newland , ope ral or.
4-25-tfc
doors and windows, carport 5,
PANTS &amp; JEANS
B. Quisenberry has large
667 6306
---------marquees, aluminum siding
a 23-31p ones. lOc pound at the old Post
SEWING Machine Service, and ra iling . A. Jacob. sa les
Office bui lding , Syr acuse.
SALE I
clean , oil, adjust, $399, in your
r epresentative . For fr ee1
Ohio
LOSE weight with New Shape
home
;
phone
992-5331.
e"
s timates , ph one Charles
Buy 2 Pairs and
8·23·121 p
Tablet s. 10 day supply only
-30tc
Lis
le, Syra cuse, V . V.
8-11
GET I PAIR FREE
5 1. 4q at DuH on Drug Co ..
J ohnson and Son, Inc.
Middlepor t. and Nelson Drug ZIG ZAG sewing machi ne, th is All kinds, all sizes for men,
3·2·11•:
machine is dressmaker 1 women, young men, bvys
Store, Pomeroy .
Real
Estat~ For Sale
~----model. lh is ma ch ine makes
CONVENIENT but sec luded O"DEL L WHEEL alignmenl
buttonholes , darns, em · and gir ls. Hurr y to .. .
MEIGS SENIORS - Call now
located a l Crossroads. Rl. ~24 .
building _lots at Rock Spr ing s,
br oi deri es ;
take
over
POMEROY
lor appointment to have your
Complete front end serv ~ce,
close
to
High
School
&amp;
Fair
SEN IOR PORTRAIT ta ken.
payment s ol $5.10 or pay $6 a / Y•. Jack w. Carsey, Mgr. ;
tune up and brake se rv1ce
Ground; call or see Bill Witte ,
Portrail 5 wi lt be taken
mon th ; cal l 992 -5331.
~
Phone992-2181
Wheels
balan ced
elec
992-2189
aller
5
p.m.
week
·
8 23 6lc
Wednesday. Aug . 23rd lhru
Ironi ca ll y.
All
wor k
days.
Sa t ., Aug. 26th. Grover's
guaranteed .
RP.:~~ ,.n n.=.hl o
8-6-30ic
Studio. phone 992 -2475, DELUXE 8 track Stereo in COAL, Limestone, E)(celsior
i-ates
.
Phone
742
32J2 or
Salt Works, E. Main St ..
Walnut Console ; will se ll for
Middleport, Ohio
992
-3213.
/ · l! · Tl (
Pomeroy,
Phone
992
·3891
.
balan ce due of $88.21 or pay
8·16.9lc
4·12-lfc
$6 .10 a month ; ca ll 992-5331.
READY -MIX
CONCRE TE
8-23·61c
del ive red right to your
CO NTEMPORARY Conso le
Heip Wanted
project . Fas t and easy . Free
stereo, AM·FM radio , 4 speed
19 FT. HOLIDAY Rambler
esti
mates . Phone 997 JISJ
EXPERIENCED
cnr pen ter. Tr a vel
changer.
4
speaker
sound
Tra iler .
self Goegl e in Read y Mix Co .. .
Phone 99?-3918.
syste m . Wa lnut veneer
contained, sleeps sil(, exMiddleport , Ohi o.
,
ca binet. Balance $67 .32. Use
8·11-6lc cellent condition ; phone 6676-30
ti
c
2
New
Homes
,
all
electric,
3
ou'
budget
plan
.
Call992·1085
.
3400.
...
.
bedrooms, full basement and
8·18·61 c
BABYSITTER lor 3 children in
8-20-6tc
TUN
E
UPS.
brake
jobs and
wifh
lake
lrontage;
garage.
my home . phone 992-3645 - - - - - - - - -othe r aut o work . Very
atter 8:30p .m. or before ll APPLES Fitzpa trick Orchards, MAPLE stereo -rad io com at Five Points area .
reasonabl e rat es . Wa11"1es
a.m
bina ti on, AM-FM rad io, 4
State Route 689 . Phone
Auto Service, school !rained
speed changer , 4 speaker
8-2J.61c
Wilkesville 669 -3785.
Roule I. Shade. Ohio 992 -65-1/ ,
soun d system . Balance $72.55.
8-17.10tc
PH. 992-2571
next to Whaley' s Paint Shop .
SA LESMAN wan ted, lull or
Use our budget lerms . Call
8 20 -121c
part tim e eve ning s. car CANNING
992 -1085.
tomatoes and
OR
992-3975
necessary. Dr op a card· with
B
·18-6tc
mangoes . Geraldine Cleland,
name. address, age and p~1on e
Racine , Otlio.
Real Estate For Sale
num ber to Mr . Foss, P. 0 .
B 16-lf c SUMMER clearance of pattern FOR SALE by owner. Yellow
Box 4133, Cincinnati, Ohio
frame house, six rooms and
books ar"!d imported yarns.
J520 4
balh . Large lot. Located in ·
MOBILE Home oil furna ce.
Needlecralt Shop. Rl . 124
Syracuse on Rt . 124. Second
tank . etc.; phone 992-5241 .
East. Syracuse. 10 a.m. to 7
CLELAND
house on left going north
8-22-61p p.m. daily except Sunday .
inside
corporat
ion
line.
ALL ABOARD HOUSEWIVES.
REALTY
8· fO.tfc
608 E. Main
7·27 -tl
ENROLL BY SEPT . 25th . AKC registered miniature - - - - - Pomeroy , Oh io
Las t chance to hop aboard the Schnauzers . Ph . 4&lt;16·2497.
puppies. Silver Toy. 7 ROOM house and bath , new ly
8·22 -121 c POODLE
PLAYHOUSE TOY !ra in lo
Park view Kennels, Phone 992·
painted,
Un ion
Ave. ,
success . We 're sellin g toys
5443.
80 ACRES
Pomeroy, phone 992·5641 .
and booking parti es, having BOAT , motor, trai ler and ac
B-15-ffc .
8-22-blp 11? story fram e home, l
fun and getting pa id. As a cessones. i1250 ; phone 992
room s, bath , barn 3BK50,
demo I hav e no delivering , no 9981.
varieties ol lop ALL . ELECTRIC hom e. 2 impl ement bui ld ing , chicken
collecti on, and I do not need
8-22-3tc SEVERAL
quality, tree r ipened, cann ing
bedroom , utility room , kit . house , 40 ldlabl e ocres.
any exper ience . I gel free
peaches ; now ava ilable
chen, dinirig area. bath, large CLOSE TO NEW MINE .
training Final deadline for YAMAHA 250 Enduro. 8 months
through early September;
living room with wall -to-wall
hiri ng is Sept. 25, call me now, old, Norge ele ctric range. like
20 ACRES
Bob's Market , Mason, W. Va .,
carpeting, air -conditioning ,
don ' t wait. Margaret Fortune. new . Phone 992 -7109.
above
the
Pomeroy
-Mason
Moden
hom
e, 3 bedroom s,
garage , plenty of water ,
9-.l9-5414 or Barbara La mbert ,
8·21 6tc
Bridge ; phone 773·5308.
bath,
ca
rpeted,
furn is hed,
draper ies and rods included ;
4463411.
=--~------8·15-tfc
ALSO
income
proper
ly, 2
Permastone
Stucc
o
and
8 22 -tfc FORCED air furnace , com
outside ; s miles South of
bedroom s. bath. furn ished
---------pl ete, stoker fired , all control s
Ka iser Aluminum on Rt . 2; rented. 4 bedrooms, some
and piping ; phone 882·3182 .
Wanted To Buy
Mobile
Hom~s
For
Sale
phone
89S·3886. Ml . Alto, W. paneling. FREE GAS TO
8·22-3tp
Va .
ALL OF THE ABOVE .
OLD Furn!ture, oak ta bles. ANTI QUE sew ing mach 1ne
8-22-31c
10 ACRES
organ s, d1s hes, clocks, brass
'
• Air Conditioners
Honeymoon rre adle , TAP ,
l
bedroom
home, dinin g
bed s, or complete households . sews good. phone 742 5735.
8 ROOM h6use. balh. large lot.
• Awnings
Write M. D. Miller, Rf . 4.
room
,
balh,
full
basement ,
gas and electric, phone 992 8·22 ·31 c
Pomeroy, Ohio. Ca ll 992-6271 .
2602.
• Underpinning
por che s, 2 sma ll buildings .
6·28-llc 1910 ALLIS.CHALMER S HD -21
ON GOOD BLA CK TOP
8-22-61p
B. SN IOSII56 Hyd . full U Complete mobile hom~ · :;1--;R:-;0:-;0:cM=s-. --:c
p-:-;,--;b-a.,-1h:-,- 655 ROAD .
service - plus gigant ic
blade SN 6381.21.000 Mark II
3.05 ACRES
For Rent
Sycamore St.. Middleport ;
engine, enc losed Allen canopy "display of mobile homes ,
3
bedrooms,
bath, uti lity
pri
ce
$8,000
;
call
after
4
p.m.
4 ROOM unfurnished apartment cab . Good condition , ready to
always available at ...
room
.
la
rg
e
patio,
garage,
992-5083.
and bath, upstairs over wo rk ; 104 Galion Grader· SN
frui
t
storage,
fru
it
trees,
8-23-3tc
double garage ; located in GMP 20796, good condition.
MILLER
grape s, berri es , chi cken
Pome r oy,
references ready to work . Inquire by
house, 3 bedrooms and
requi red . Phone 992·5293 .
house, pony pen, AL L IN
dialing J . W. Ashton ,
MOBILE HOMES . 2 STORY
bath , new fuel oil furnace ,
8-1111c Columbus l6141 48~- 9546 day s
GRASS EXCEPT GAROEN
plenty of water. 10 acres.
122o Washington Blvd.
SPACE .
or (61 4) 457 0659 evenings and
about
10 miles from Pomeroy
423·7521
BELPRE,O.
HOUSE TRAILER on Long weekends .
INSPE CT
THESE
on 681 ; phone 992-6545.
Street in Rutland ; phone 742·
8·22-6tc
PROPERTIE S BEFORE
8·23-3tc
.td63.
SCHOOL STARTS.
8·23-31c 1969 HONDA 70cc , e)(cellent CASH paid lor all mal&lt;es and - - -- - models
of
mobile
homes
.
HENRY E. CLELAND Sr .
RAC IN E - 6 room house, bath ,
condition , pool tabl e, 7 ft .
Phone area code 614·423-9531.
3 BEDROOM trai ler on large tot long, 4 ft. wi de, 6 pc . Din ette
REALTOR
llftlity room, garage, $10,000 .
·
~1~1fc
in Shade : phone 696-1283.
992-22S9
•, hone 9A9·A195.
Set . Phone 742-5641.
3·31 li e
8· 18·6fp
II no an swer 992-2568
8·20·6tc
FOR THE BEST deal in a new
3 ROOM apartment. un
or used mobile hom e, try
furn is hed. 408 Spring Ave ., CANNING tomatoes . $1.25
Kanauga Mobile Home Sales,
pi cked. Mangoes. Raymond
Pomeroy .
Kanauga, Ohio.
Rowe , Yellow Bush Rd .,
7. t6·301c
8·10.If c
Racine. Phone 949 -3746.
8·17·6tc
3 AND 4 ROuM furnished an'd
Real Estate For Sale
un furni shed apartments .
110 Mechanic Stree t
FENDER
P.
A.
System
.
100
:&gt;hone 992·5434.
RACINE - 10 room houii!;&lt;
bath, basement, garage, two
4-12-tlc · watts RMS, 2 columns, 8·10"
speakers with covers , $595 ;
Pomeroy, Olt~o 45769
lots . Phone 949-4313.
Fender Showman amp. 15" D
4·5·tfp
Auto Sales
140 JBL speaker with covers , - - - - $450 ; Fender Bandmaster
'RENOVATEO
1965 CHEVELLE Ma libu , S49S ;
5 ROOMS and bath . ap .
Amp
.
2-23
'"
0120
JBL
3
BEDROOMS
Bath,
charming breaklasl noo k. Ul ilily
1969 Oldsmob ile, S1,89S ; speakers, . with reverb, with
proximately I acre of grovnd .
room
and
nice
~itchen.
All carpeted. Lovel y concr ete
phone 992·5186.
Phone 949·3633.
covers, $575 ; Two Shure
front
porch.
Vinyl
siding
lor lltlle Ma in lenan ce. Mid.
8·20-6tc
8·17-.llc
microphones with cases, $40
die port .
each plus stands and boom;
DOWNTOWN
'
,
1969 PLYMOUTH GTX. good
Goy a guitar,
standard, HOUSE In Long Boflom. phone
condition ; phone 992-7624.
985·3529.
3 BEDROOMS- Bath, fireplace with bookshelves al each
sunburst fin ish with case,
8·22-Jip 1125; Custom Built Teardrop
end, and bullt· ln stereo. Gas f~rced air furna ce. Full
6·11 ·1fc
bass I Fender style neck I
basement with garage and J rooms . Block garage on extra
1910 OLOSMOB ILE 98 . ex - · "C ap~ a in America" finish IDEAL S·ACRE RANCH . Lake
lot. Asking only 121.000.00.
Conchas. New Mexico. 12.975.
cellent condition , 1 lady
with case. 5140 ; Light system,
OPPORTUNITY
No Down . No Interest. $25 mo.
owner . Phone 247 -2844.
2 bla ck lights. 4·150 walt
BUSINESS
BUILDING
- and a modern 3 bedroom air
fo r 119 mos . Vacation
8·20·61p spots, indiv idual adjustment ,
home.
Wood
burning firepla ce In livi ng . All
conditioned
Paradise , Free Brochure.
intensity con'trof, meta l Cdse.
rooms
paneled.
Young
pine
trees and nice view of the Ohio
Lake
Conchas:
Box
Ranchos
1195 ;
CHOPPER,
1969
River.
A
real
good
buy.
$25.000.00.
2001DD.
Alameda
,
California
Harley -Davidson, " Custom
94501.
OVER7 ACRES
Springer."' '" Electric Start,'"
8·6·301p
ON ROUTE 7- With plains water lap. Mostly cleared and
" Polished Cases, " " Drag
Exhavsts," e)(tenslve
ready for house construction. Asking 110.000.00.
chrome,
many
custom CHESHIRE. 5 rooms &amp; bafh,
TUPPERS PLAINS
basement, l lf.o~ Acre. 10
goodies , $2,795 ; - cal l Eric'
NICE
J
bedrOom
home with large closefs. Large living
rtlinutes from Gavin; storm
Chambers 992·S31k\ aller 5
and
kitchen,
plus
utility.
Concrete fronl porch. Nearly an
windows, newly remodeled ;
p.m.
acre
of
nice
laying
land.
Want S16,000.00.
carpeled dining area, large
8·18-6fp
living room; call after S:JO
weekdays, Saturday &amp;
NOW IS THE TIME TO CALL US TO LIST. PRICES ARE .
60 H. P. SCOTT . outboard,
Sunday, 367·7114.
,
GOOD AND THE DEMAND IS INCREASING. WE WILL
complete controls·, tanks and
8·18-10fc
TREAT YOUR PROPERTY AS IF IT WERE OURS.
spare propeller; French
prov:ncial youth bed with
HELEN L. TEAFORD, ASSOCIATE
sheels; phone 992-7201 after 5 5 ROOM house on SO' x 100' lot ;
992·3325
p.m.
call 9'12·5786.
8·20·4tp
8·1B·6tc
I

NOW, lATER---

Pom•roy
Motor Co.

2 SIGII~
OF
QUALITY

BARNEY

CALASOZO, TH~ R:&gt;I'UlAR
I&lt;EFCJR" CROWP ALREAI'Y
HAS GOSSIP ON THE
THAT JIM-JUSTIN

ONE OF THEIR

c.;;.··;;;._,~

IN A FIT Of

ofT
the
handle
10. Sonny's
partner
11, Stringent
1z: Frost
13. Click
beetle
14. Earth
(obs.)
15. Aunt
(Sp.)
16. Wutten·
berg
measure
1'1. Fortune
19. Bird"s
nest
20. Roll
call
answer
21. - on
· (love
to
excess)
ZZ. Lena
of

36. Company
37. Guaranty;
pledge
38. French
river
39. Irascible
40. Nurtured
DOWN
1. Felt a
twinge
2. Coast
3. Psychia·
trists

Yeaterday's AnsWer
8. Hermit
26. 1937 and
9. Ridiculed
1938
11. Fishing
Oscar
net
winner
15. Exhaust
28. Friend·
18. Conduce
ship
21. Sur29. High·
realist
strung
painter
30. Destroyed
22. Most cozy
35. Make
23. Delayed
captive
24. Electrical
36. Boxer
term
Foster

(sl.)

(2wds.)
4. Blunder
5. Team

race
6. Poly-

nesian
beverage
7. Annoy
- (sl.)

(4wds.)

aJ I I
['iTUCCA

~

tCUIMPE

R

) I

FORK OUT FOR
A TRIP TO

I LJ

J I IJ I

THE FA!i1 EA5T 1

Now arranre the circled letters

to form the 1urprise anAwer, u

IUir&lt;•ted by the aLove cartoon.

I ..... --... I t I 111111 I I J
(AIIIlfe ... tomorrow)

Jumbl•" IROOD
Ynlerda1'•

song

24. Dimin·
ished
25. Latin
poet
26. Story
27. Troops
ZB. Theatrical
performer
31. Exasper·
ate
32. Floor
covtring
33. Biddy
34. Para·
disiaoal

•uzzy

SWIIVE

\ An•"'"' : Wha1•1 n•ehd for n durt
1rm~el?- "FAll"

.
111

JARGON
,

I t~r

.

f.n,r~&gt;r"

o

-

IT PR06A6L'/ FLOAT£0 CLEAR
ACROSSltJ TflE OTflER SIDE
FTHE WORLD W~ERE ANOTHER
LITTLE KID FOUND IT AND 1!5
PLA'&lt;'JN6 il.l!TK IT...

DAILY CRYPTOQUOTE- Here's how to work It: .
A X·Y D L BAA X R
is LONGFELLOW
One letter si mply stands for another. In this sample A is
used for the thrc• L"s. X for the two O's, etc. ·single letters.
apostrophes, the length and formation of the words are oil
hints. Each day (he code letters arc different.
CRYPTOQUOTES
VriN

ATPM

PSFI(OVNL,
VDSV"J

QFLN
S 1U

BAL

VDN

TSIRVM

AIPM

RJ

BSFPV
I

PSFKDSEPN R·J TSIRVM .- DNILR

ENLK .IAI.

LUCKY KID!!

�.

..

..

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,._'

....

.

·-

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.

:-;

·"

20 - The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., August 23, 1972

jR~tl;;b·"'ii:Ji':; · ~ Artist-in-Residence Now is Kati- Meek
··=·

·

Electi on
of
office rs
highlighted the Kyger Creek
Athletic BoostersCiub meeting
'fl!esday nig ht.
Dale Rothgeb, Jr., elected
pres iden t, s u c~ee d s Robert
Gordon. Other new officers are
Lee McCarty, vice president;
Dorothy Roush, secretary , and
Connie Wise, treasurer. The
club voted to change its
mee ting dates to the first and
third Thursday of each month.
Along discussion was held on
the pu rc hase of footba 11
~ quipm e n t. John Wic kline,
high sc hool pri ncipal a nd
athl etic direc tor , answered
questions on the purchase of
equipme nt, insura nce, a nd
rece ipts fro m la st yea r 's
football games.
Rothgeb appoin ted a committee of Emmett Thompson,
I
Richard Kern and Nathan Cay
to recommend money-making
projects. The 1972 membership
drive w~s also begun Tuesday
night.
Head football
. f Jim
. d Coach
b II
1
Sprague rev1ewe us oot a
squad composed 91 50 players.
He said the team was well
represented according to
classes . The Bobcats will
scrimmage Chesapeake at 10

·••·•

a. m. Saturday and Vinton
County at 8 p. m. Sa turday,
Sept. 2.
Sprague tha nked
the

boosters who helped paint the ·
team's locker room located
near the Kyger creek football
stadium.

Pomeroy H
. as $88,885
Pomeroy Village funds as of
July 31 tota led $88,884.61 according to the report of Clerk
Jane Walton submitted to

expenditures, $5.58. To tal
receipts, disbursements. and
the balance in the active fund
r~spec tively were, $ 24 , 29 ~, 22 ,

Pomeroy Council Monday
night. Recei pts, disbursements
and clerk's balance, respec·
lively in the active fund were:
General, $7101.03, $11 ,622.91,
$2165.65; boa t dock, $270, no
expenditures, $1012.95; sewer.
$5268.86, $11,750.36, $14,493.79;_
fire Mpartment, no receipts,
$233.21, $1900.86 ; cemetery,
$814 .90, $888.20, $151.57; street
fund , no receipts, $1713.45,
$8551.64;; sUite highway, no
receipts, $77. 10, $2778.36;
utility, no receipts, $856.87,
$15,610.15; wa ter operating,
$901 1.43, $9336.43, $2690.83;
wate r improvement, no
receipts, no ex penditures,
$15.61 ; guaranty meter, $125,
$ll 2, $4 3!4.72; parking meter,
$1600, $3000, $10,677.01 ; sewer
construction, no receipts, no

$39,590.53, $64,368.72.
Receipts, disbursements and
clerk's balance respectively in
the inactive fund include, bond
retirement, no receipts, no
ex pen di tu res, $22 ,266.93;
special street bond retirement,
nll receipli, no expe nditures,
$1 869.70; sewer bond improvement. no receipts, no
e&gt;pend i ture s, $334.26;
ce me tery imp rovement, no
recei pts, no expendi tures, $45.
Receipts, disbursements and
balances in all fun ds respecNo one was i.n jured in four
lively totaled, $24,291.22,
li'ilffic accidents inves tiga ted
139,590.5:1, $88, 884.61.
Tuesday at the Gallia-Meigs
Post State Highway Patrol.
The first occ urred at I :45 p.
m. on Rt. 35, one and one-ten th
•
mile east of Rt. 279 where
Denver Adki ns, 36, Rt. 2, Oak
Hill, traveling west, lost

MEIGS THEATRE

-~

'j" -.. :~:-·&amp;'It&gt;.~-

,.- - ,~,...._ ..

,:&lt;·;-i

W'

$Want Ad ;

Augusl23-24
NOT OPEN
Fr iday thru Tuesdoy

Augusl25-29
Woll Disney's
NOW YOU SEE HIM,
NOW YOU DON'T
Technicolor

Help Wanted
AUTO body
necessa r y,
who can do
re asona bl e

Kurt Russell

man , e)(perience
we want a m an
qualit y wor k in a
length of t ime .

The biggest and best body

Cesar Romero

IGJ
ALSO
BEAR COUNTRY
COLORCARTOON :

shop in the area, exce llent
pay a nd fr in ge benef it s.
Contact Jim Buchanan , Body
Shop Foreman , Mason County

Mol or Compan y, Chev rolet
and Oldsmobile Dea lersh ip,

Double Oribble
Admissi on : $1.50 Adu lts
Children: 75c

Poin t Pleasant , W.Va. Ph one
1304) 675-3370.

8 2Utc

SHOW STARTS 7 P.M.

THE KINGS ARMS NITE CWB
On Rt. 7 Below Middleport, 0 .
PRESENTS

News, Event
Mr . and Mrs. Ar thur
Crabtree were in Parkersburg
on Sunday and called on his
aun t and uncle, Mr. and Mrs.
Emzie Dav is.
The Cleland reunion was held
rece ntly at Forest Acres Park.
Those from this area attending
were Mr. an d Mrs. Dale
Stansbury, Mr. and Mrs.
Harold Oxley and Mr. and Mrs.
Jerr y Stansbury and fam ily,
loca l. Oth ers among those
prese nt were Mr. and Mrs.
Stansbu ry
of
Larry
Reynoldsburg and Mr. and
Mrs. Clair Stansbury and
family of Groveport.

MASON DRIVE-IN
"
.
,

I

o\1 )

"

\

GEO. HALL

Tonight Thru Aug. 26
11 .00 Cover Charge Sal. Nigh t, Aug . 26

sc hool authorities and Donald
R. Strei big, director of OAC,
Dr .
Kenileth
Maran tz,
eva luator of the AIR program,
and Gerald Tollifson, super-

Saturday 9:30 am to 9-pm

conditions following an acCident at 6:09 p. m. on Rl. 35,

Switchm an Has

fou r-tenths of a mile west of Rt.
160.
Offi cers said Stacey los t

New Certificate

control of his car which ran off

course at General Telephone at 5:05p.m. on Safford School

Company of Ohio's plant Rd., four-tenths of a mile north
of Il l. 141 where cars dri ven by
b·aining school here.
Thi s one-week cou rse David T. Day, 21, Rt. 2,
covered detailed instruction on 'Gallipolis, and Daniel F.
used
to Smith. 18, Rt. 2, Bidwell , C·
equi pmen t
au tomatica ll y id enti fy the ulhded . There was min or
caller 's number on direct damage to bo th cars. Day was
dialed calls. A graduate of Pt. cited for speed fur conditions.
A fina l mishap occurred at
Pleasan t High School, McCoy
llas been with the company f1ve 2:30a. m. on Rl. 554, nine miles
years. He works in the east of Rt. 160. Officers said
Pome roy Exchange in the Leon B. Geor·ge, 48, Rt. I,
com pany 's Athens District. Vinton. lost cu11lrol of his car
. McCoy previously completed which struck an embankment.

three other specialized courses George later was charged with.
in the compan y's tra inmg intoxi cation.

An excellent time for back to school

Program

" GROUP MARRIAGE "
Plus
THE MARRIAGE
OF A
YOUNG STOCKBROKER

I Color)
Richard Benj amin
Joanna Shi mkus

I R)

Pleasant Valley Hospital
Discharges: David Smith,
Mrs. Bobby Crump, son, Point
Pleasant; Mrs. Steven ~' i c l d s,
da ughter, New Ha ven; Connie
Sue Lik ens, Henderson;
Angela Simon, Pomeroy; Giles
Hysell, Minersville ; William
Rard m III , Point Pleasant. and
Kathy Johnson , Mason.

ACCOuNT ERRED
In the account of completed
wedding plans for Miss Linda
Ann Shenefield and Mr. Roy
Rubert Vaughan it listed Mr .
Pat Vaughan as one of the
groomsm~ n . This was in error
as Mr. Pa t O'Brien will be one
of the groomsmen.

shopping all over the store.
~ Be sure to visit t he men s and boys department lsi floor . A big new

shipm ent of boys flare leg slacks in corduroy and brushed denim .
New cdl ors such as rust , red, brown and navy blue. Regular. slims
and huskies si zes 6 to 18.
~ See t he m any, many sty les of boys and young mens sport and dress
shi rts. So lid color s, stripes, smart patterns and colors . Young mens
knit slacks in sizes 29 to 42 and boys sizes6 to 18.
~ N ew select ion of slipover and cardigan sweaters . Knit vests.
Wembl ey ties for m en, young men and boys. Pari s Belts for men and
boys .
~ A co m plet e se lection of Wrangler Jean s (blue denim) for boys and
fo r men. Trim fit and fl ar e leg styl es. Select back to school hosiery
that you need. too. Plenty of colors. Plenty of styles and In corr ect
·
sizes for men and for bo ys.
~ Comp le t e size select ion in boys and young mens Gym Shorts ·
Pajam as for men and bo ys + Robes · You' ll enjoy shopping In the
mens and boys deparlmenl lsi floor . We'll gladly help you find
what ever you want in the size and color that's right for you.
~ S hop th e 2nd floo r for School Clothes for the College Crowd · Grade
a.nd Hig h School qirl s · Skirts · Tops · Slacks · Blouses · Sweaters ·
Coat s - Raincoat s · J ackets - Dresses.
Comp lete selections of Buster Brown Sh irts · Slacks · Shirts ·
Hosiery.
- Also for Luggage . A big selection of sizes . colors and styles ·
Trunks · Tote and Gy m Bags · Bedspread s and Draperi es. Pillows
for dorm and coll ege roo ms.

arrived at the hall crying,
spitting and coughing and
covering their faces with
handkerchiefs · when pollee
reapooded to the diiOrder with
tearg~ and mau arrests.
Evidence of the extensive
uae of gas to 11eeP protellera
from getting within miaallt!"
throwing range of the convention hall wu a large
number of teargas can1.s1ttn
llrewn around the IOUtheut
corner of the convention cen!A!r'
compla-oJnsi.sting oi several
buildings, enclosed by high
fence. ·
By the· time the demollltrationa were over-ind they
lasted until after midnight
outside a hotel hollllng While
Houae staff members-pollee
aaid 1,100 were arrested, including 1140 men and 170
women.
l.Altial judget held bearlnga
through the night for the
prisoners and by 1:30 &amp;.Ill.
EDT, wllb 1M ~ IIIII
1,111 Amoted
gi)q on, about 100 hid 'been
Some of the deleaatea releued afttr paJ!ng. fines «

Shop Thursday
9:30 am to 5 pm
.

. ,..

"

Van Camp's Beef Stew

sse

can

Semi-Boneless Hams
5th and PEARL STS., RACINE
"The Store With A Heart,
You, WE LIKE"
Right reserved to limit quantities
We Gladly Accept Fed. Food Stamps

Prices Effective Aug. 23-30

USDA

Cut and .
French Style

HAM SALAD •••• ~b~ 89¢

FRENCH CITY SMOKED

lb.

. HALF or WHOLE

SAUSAGE ••••••••• lb~
FRENCH CITY

20 ct.

79
$

WIENERS •••••••• !~g~

Saturday 9 to 9

4

for

¢

4

303
cans

Sweet Pickles
Chip Slices
Ref. jar

jar

1

CANTALOUPES

2

,•

Yellow On ions

2 lb. 29e _ 3 lb. 49e

w~

restraint.
"Theae pollee are very
cooperative," aaid Don Swansen, 20, Just before he was
~ to )Ill. •'Oar entinUel
aren't the pollee. Our enemies
are Nl1on and the war
crimlnala . ... Tlleae are good

Florida National quardatnen
· w1» had been mobillled in the
Miami .-ea or the 2,500 U.S.
By Ualted Preulalerulloul
COLUMBUS -GOV, JOHN J. GILLIGAN today cUt a ribbon Army paratroopers and U.S.
opening the 1972 Olilo Fair wblch offlcial5 hope to draw more Marines who had been sent -to
nearby Homeatead Air Force
than 2.5 mll1loo persona d~ Its 12 day stand.
Base to serve as a backup
Gilligan, along with hl8 wife and members of hl8 cabinet, force .
snipped theribbonatthenialn iateat8;15a.m., 15mlnutee later
Old BuleiUaed
than the scheduled opening. "This Is really a splendid way for the .
The dem911S!rators poured
state of Ohio to ahow what It has and lis quality of life as Into the palm-lined streets of
displayed here lor the next 12daya," heaald.
lhla raort city of whitewashed
"I hope that allll mUllon Ohloana through visiting the fair, bulldqa in brllllant afternoon
seeing It on television and reading about It In the newapapen will I!UIIShine. They blocked traffic
have a better understanding of what we are trying to ac- by throwing makellhlft barr!·
compllah," aaid Gllllgan.
cadet aero• street&amp;.
They pounded on the vehicles ·
EDDYVILLE, KY. - FIVE CONVICTS who took a lab of delegatee ll'ying to get to the
technician and two guards hoetqe at lmlfepolnt In the maximum conventioo hall and sprayed
security Eddyville state Penitentiary, released them unharmed 801De vehicles with Paint They
today, 12 hours after the ordeal began. "Everything's O.K.," .hurled rocks, deflated and
state Corrections Comml8sloner Charles Hoimes told newimen slaihed Urea and ripped the
wiring out of buaes.
gathered at the 19th ~tury prlaon. "EveryOOe's .lllfe."
The 2,000 state and local
Holmes has rushed here from hl8 home at Frankfort, the
pollee
concentrated In the
state capital about 200 miles away, when the inmates refused to
dllcull their demands with inllltutlon officials, saylnf they retort . strip responded with
would talk ooly to him. The convicts, aU·deaa-ibed as ''bard core tear gas and chased the
crlmlnala," and their ihree hostagea had been !nlltle a win- demonstrators with squad
cars, . hauling them 9ft In
dowless hospital pharmacy room l!lnce 5 p: m. '(EDT) Wedoranse paddy wagons a.nd
neaday. Aasiltant Superintendent WUJiam Lasley had p~ renteid
the five inmatei no pltyalcal punlahment would be doled out if.
Police WtiKI 50 derelict buses
they ·surrendered.
. at the convention center to
build a bamcade ·lo ~ the
WASHINGTON - THE ASSOCIATION OF Bituminous dem0118tratora out..
Contractors (ABC) 81Ul0l!llced Wedneaday that the fedel-al Pay
But four.managed to get in on
Board had approved raises for Workers an&lt;! that retroactive guest paases. They were
wases would be paid within 30 days.
ldent~ed as Vietnam veterans
But the United Mine Workers of America (UMWA) was llld tine ol them were In
considering Whether It would c!lallenge the Pay Board'a tleclalon wheel chain. They started
limiting the lncreue to 9.5 per cent. The ABC-UMWA contract · shoUting "atop the bcmbingl"
negotiated lui Januiry provided a 14 to.18 per cent (IIY booll when Nilon was five minutes
lncludinc a cut In the workday from ato 7~ houri. That contract Into bll apeecb, and they were
wu twice submitted to the fay Board by both the ABC and the quietly removed.
(Continued on page ID)
UMWA and both tlmea was reJected.
IWALA LlJMPUR- MALAYSIA ANNOUNCED today that.
hippies would be ~ed from entering the counll'y from Sept. I
while thoee already here would be ordered to leave In order to
p-eserve .thf 'llltlon'a "dect11CY and moralll."
A !kme Mlnlatry sttitement aald lmmlvatlon offlclala will
ezerclae their "dilcreUon" In deciding Who II a hippy but gave a
l'OIJ8h SUidellne - "People with 10111 hair, unkempt beards, dirty
clothlis and a dirty Dell.'~

\

Gerber's Strained.Baby Food·

FOR

¥z gal. cartons

FOR

~~ . 59e.

s·

BUTTER-

RED YAMS

Instant Cocoa

Elbow ·Macaroni
Delmonica
~:· •1
Brand

large Size

...

posting bond.
No Cblcqo Vloleoee
Miami Beach Pollee Chief
Rocky Pomerance, who was
commander·ln·chief of the
state, county and city police
forces uaed to control the
derilollllrati0118, said he believed the majority of the
protesters were sincerely
motivated. But he aald ''many
were jljst little hoodlums. and
traahers," and that It was these
who created the worst trouble.
The arrettls exceeded those
at the Democratic .convention
in Chicago In 1968 when
Olicago pollee took 841 Into
Cultody. But there was let!8
violence In Miami Beach thia
year. Nineteen persons were
treated at hollpltala for inJuries, but 10me delllllllllrators
praised ·the police for

Agnew, renominated with only
a muffled murmur of dissent,
enchanced hl8 position at the
three-day convention which
cost the GOP $1.9 mUllon.
Apew Gets Leg Up
Conservatives, who dominated the (X'oceedings, said Agnew
leaves Miami with a leg up on
the potenltsl 1976 (X'esidential
nomination, but mentioned
other conservatives · .:..._
California Gov. Ronald
Reagan, Sen. James L .
Buckley of New York and
recently divorced Sen. Robert
Dole of Kansas, the GOP
national chairman - as .
possible competitors.
· "Ten minu~ Is sometimes a
long time In politics," North
Caronna GOP chainnan Frank
Rouse said. "Anything can ·
happen In four years."
Nixon embarks today on a
cross-country jet tour in
pursuit of his "new majority" .
with stops and apeeches In
three key states, Illinois,
Michigan and california. Then
he plans to put politics aside for
a two-week vacation at San
Clemente and a conference In
HawaU with Japan's prime
minister.
ATiDge of Bllterness
A tinge of bitterness accompanied Agnew's renomination.
An Oregon delegate voted lor
TV
commentator
David
Brinkley Instead and two
delegates abstained. One of
them, Ot1ls H. Richmond, 26, a
Negro from .Pine Bluff, Ark.,
aaid he cooaldered Agnew "a
racist ligot." Rlclunond Ia a
candidate for the Arkansas
legislature.
Four Vietnam War veterans,
three In wheelchairs, In·
terrupted the proceedings With
"stop the bombing" shouts
bafore. they W81'8 surrounded
by do!lesates to hide them frOm
television cameras and

12 .:' '1 ,
Stoke~'s ~pple Sauce

6 ·: •·1' . ·. . .

new·

PAIUII - TWO DELTA AIRLINES aecutlftl
to
Wtllbii!Cton today with lhlir fill riii!IW aquanly cit twO .bl.lrCt
IUilcalel conlalDing a t1 mll1loo hiJack 1'111111111 nturned to thlm.
by Allerll. In ooe ol the mall bUnllw IICUI'ity _ , . . ever
at Orly Alrpclrl, row11 al pollee briJtl,ltic w!th . BUJW
IIIITOUnded the aircraft and the t'tnlllllll befort llie taltealf. The
.1.7 ~ . . . ....mer~ rlahl down to b!lob they . . .
carrytna and OCinlllnll allhlir pocbta and hMcllwl•·
A band of elibl bjjackn !rom Detroit hljackltd a Dalta
P' LC• br Jail 11. '1'111Joht•lnacl the l'IIIICIIII and diva led
lbulrtnft to AIJII.«a. Bat lila jlcnaw ID Alliin 'i"l "' tW
the_, wlalhl hiJae' I I.-led. '1111 tl mOUon -lltpt

.... .., .... lhl...,.lnv ''c•Wtbe_...'CIIIml
IIM)'wweplri ollhllllict Panlbw ltlnd lbat,.......llie _ ,
for Ita •JIIpl '" iidktn'IJidi'thMia fiiWWii-IDaiJe, 1
!llllm
.
.
.. daed.

i

\

Decision

WASHINGTON (UP!) - The
General Accounting Office
(GAO), congressional watchdog agency, withheld a
report on the handling of
Republican campaign funds
after conferrin g with the
party's chief fund raiser ,
MaUrice H. Stans, it was
learned today.
Washington sources said
Elmer B. Staats, comptroller
general of the United States
and head of the GAO, felt he
needed more answers to
questions about the use of
campaign funds before he
could approve the report.
"Staats is a very careful guy
and he wants to make very
certain the report is correct
belore he signs his name," one
source said. A definite date has
not been set for release 91 the
report.
The Democrats, meanwhile,
accused the White House . of
using "every ounce of political
muscle available" to suppress
ihe report.
In a statement at Annapolis,
Md ., Sen. George S.
McGovern's national cam' Lawrence
paign chairman,
F. O'Brien, charged that Stans
"successfully blocked" the
GAO report, which woUld have
" created a distinctly sour
note" · In the midst 91 the .
Republican National Convention,
"The plain truth is this,"
.O'I!rien said, "We are now
witnessing ope o1 most outrage&amp;us and blatant political
cover-ups of this generation.
Richard Nixon, John Milchell,
and Maurice Stans recognize
that the facts of this case, If
Russ Williams, district spread before the Anlerican
governor , attended the ·people, would place their entire
_.omeroy·Mlddlepor~ Lion&amp;
Club noon lunc~on Wednelday
· at the Meigs Inn.
· W.llliama enlarged upon
upcoming conventions and
BRING SOAP, TOWEL
progr11111 used by other clubs
The · Eastern Athletic
to raise funds for club projecta. · Boosters ·w111 meet Thursday,
He. alllo 511Ue&amp;ted plelilberil Aug. 24, anytime during the
should evaluate their club's ·afternoon or at 5 p; m. for
progreas.
clean-up duty on bleachers and
W~U Hoover read, ''your · · concession aland for the
Club and You", a practice Saturday nlsht scrimmage
initiated by Don Pearch against New lellngton. Adpresident. Each meeting club mlaslon to the event ill a bar of
memben will hear subjects soap or an old towel. Play
pertaining to Uonltm.
starts at 7 p. 11'1.

truw:

16 oz.

H~rshey's

2

'1'

09

CLOSED SUNDAYS

MILK

'1

Del Monte Green Beans

·Home Made

Monday Thru Friday

9:00 to 7:00

Uquid
32 oz.

CHOICE
Superiors
Good
.USDA Choice

•'

Debbi~ Detergent

"Here's The Meat Buy of the Week"

-~-

~;~·:·:"In Brie~
J li . ::~:u:~~:tthe~~ Stans in

ELBERFELDS IN POMEROY
OL

~

NO.j _2

No important change In
temperature through Friday.
Chance of occasional showers
or thunderstorms mainly after
noon and evening hours. Highs
today and Friday around 10
north to mid 80s south. Lows
tonight in 60s.

en tine

Devoted To The lnrereall Of The .Meigs- Mason Area
.
-: POMEROY-MIDDLEPORT, OHIO
THURSDAY. AUGUST 24, 1972

MIAMI BEACH (UPI)Teargas IIIW Ungered around
the ball when delegates to the
Republican National Conventioo streamed out · Wednesday night after listening to
President Nimn accept their
nomination.
The delegates dabbed at
their eyei and glanced at a
heUcopter hovering overhead.
Its powerful aearchlight 10ugbt
the remmmts of the ragged
army of antiwar protelllera
which tried to make . Nixon
speak to a half-empty hall.
The demonstrators faUed In
that enterprlae. The final
convenlion eeasion started only
nine minutes late, and Nixon
launched hl8 bid lor a tleCOOd
term by addreBIIng a full hou8e
of enthualastic Republican.s.
But the protesters forced
many delegates to run a
gauntlet to get to the hall,
disabling their vehicles and
aeverely jostling and cursing
them when ·they walked.

Make Ei ber feld s Your Shopping Center for all your Back tt7 Schooi
Needs .

24

at y

1,100 Protesters
ested by Cops

program.
Augusl 23-24-25

•

MIAMI BEACH (UPI)- A tense than In 1968, the lllrators waftlllg Into the area
C11ndldate again, Richard M: President, 59, Is more securely and audible to delegates who
Nimn thinks b,e can win those In command of hl8 pol!tical ·98t crosa-legged on the floor
"fou·r
more
years" footing than at any time In a 2&amp;, .near the podi)llll to hear him
RepubUcan.s screamed lor by year publlc career. He Is better, Nixon accepted
Isolating George S. McGovern convinced he can win a renomltiatioo Wednesday night
as an advocall! of allen lde1111 Slllllllhlng mandate In Novem- ~ a theme of tlon't-letwho would tear the country. ber.
them-tlke-it-.way.
apart to solve Its problema.
With the angry cliants of
Grayer, rounder of_face, less antiestablishment demonVice President Spiro T.

Friday 9:30 am to 9 pm

co ntrol of his car which left the
highway and struck an embankmen t and draining pipe.
There was min or damage to
his car. No charge was filed .
ll ichard S. Stacey of Angelo,
Ind .. was cited to Ga llipolis
Municipal Court fur speed for

Weather

PHONE 992-2 156

TEN CENTS

President Confident of Second Term

Tonight, Thur., Fri .
Double F~ture

Also Starring The Popular

VOL XXIV

·finalists originally interviewed
in a meeting between local

Coy, Syracuse, a switc hman , There was minor damage to his
has received a certificate for car.
A two car collision occurredcompleting a special tra ining

,', l. r l,ltlll N1qlt!l 1

OAC to choose GaiUpolls for
the 1972 Arttstoin-Residence
program. The program has·
beenoperatinglnColumbusfor
the past two yean as part of ·
the Arts IMPACT program.

Open Thursday 9:30 am to 5 pm

the righ t side of the highway ,
ng a sa nd and gravel pile.
striki
MARION - Barry W. Me·

I

School of Gallia County
Schools.
Recognition 91 the growing
influerlce of the French Art
Colony and its success with the
Riverbymanslon prompted the

ELBERFELDS IN POMEROY

Carpenter

Nashville's Newest Up-Coming Star

LYN CAMPBELL

Exhibition.
vis"r of art fur the Stale
Mrs . Meek's career in fiber De partmen t of .Education.
began at age eight when her Sites for the new artist-in·
grandmo ther taught her residence are Washington
embroidery. In tea ching Eleme ntary of Gallipolis City
elementary school children, Schools and Southwestern High
she feels that a prime objective
is the education of the senses to
design, ~olor , texture and
form. " I would like to share ·
snme of the devices I have
developed for 'seeing' nature's
art and to share the finding,
developing and translating of
an idea into a tangible thing
w1-111 th e co1or, tex 1ure an d
form that fi ber allows.
Mrs. Meek was one of seven

Bodily Injury at Zero

G£T YOUR MAN WITH A ·

Tonightond Thursday

COLI!MBUS - Kati Meek
(Mrs . Jdm D. •, of Athens, wiil
rcpwcc J&lt;&gt;hn Spofforth as the
ar lis(-i n-resid ence for
Gallipolis and &lt;;;a ilia County in
a program sponsored by the
Ohio Al'ts Council. Spofrorth is
nnt able tn partlcipate in the
initial stages of the project
because uf previous com·
mitments.
Mrs. Meek spins her own
ya rn and .with it weaves
~ori ginal designs, claiming fibe r
as her medium. She received
an A.B. from wes tern
Michigan University and has
cnndu cted several spin ning
and weavmg workshops inc1od.1ng .one a t th e F'IrS t
Mountain Heritage Folk Fest.
In add ition, she has par. . d.
· ·d h
tlclpa 1e 1n 11 ll'ee JUI'Ie s ows,
one of wl1ich was the Ap·
p a Ia chi an
Co rrid or s

Nnw Ynu KlJ1lW ·.

Tile first WDIIllln lo ~I ·
pension from the U. S.
government was · Margaret
Corbin, wounded in the
Revolutionary War .when she
took over command of a
cannon after her husband died
firing it In the batUe of Fort
Washington.

Governor in
Annual V"rsit
To Lions Club

'')

President Richard Hixon

Vice Pretident Spiro Agnew
escorted from the hall.
"I am guilty of murder !"
shouted one. "Tell the truth !
We have suffered from thl8
war !"
Outside, disorder abounded.
Demonstrators pounded delegates' cars and buses with
rocks and lists and shouted
obscenities.
Reporters alighting from a
helicopter acrompanylng Nixon 'a could sniff tear gas used to
disperse the tholiilnds or
rampaging protestors who

EXTENDED OUTLOOK
Extended Oullook
Saturday lhrougb Monday:
Parlly cloudy and mild
Saturday, · Sunday and
Monday with a chance of
showers each day. High
temperatures In the low lo
mid 80s. Overnight lows In
tbe upper 50s to lower 60s.

roamed the streets in a futile
attempt to disrupt Nixon's
appearance . The President
made no mention of the
disorders.
Shake 1,00 Hands
After speaking, Nixon and
Agnew shookthehandsol more
than 1,1100 delegates and alternates. They pushed, shoved,
and swore trying tQ reach their
nominees.
In !)Ia speech, Nixon lashed
at McGovern, without naming
him liy nllllll!, as one who would

burn down the house to destroy
the rats.
He compared America to a
great building, still incomplete. "Because some of
the windows are broken," he
said, critics "say tear it down
and start again. We say,
replace the windows and keep
buUding."
Nixon aoft.pedalled Me·
Govern's chief isstle, Vletn"'".
·He made no pledge to end the

Dress Policy Adopted
RACINE - A dress code for
hi gh sc hool students was
adopted by the Southern Local
School Board Wednesday
night.
Deta ils of. the code- length 91
hair and dresses to be permitted- were withheld today
as a separate Code" for junior
14

high puplls has not been
determined, according to Supt.
of Schools Ralph Sayre. The
board is expected to come to a
decision on the Junior High
code probably
tonight,
whereupon both will be announced Friday.
Sayre said 200 desks and

Great Organizer to Direct
OVHS Emergency Project
Oscar Koeplin of Columbus
has been appointed director of
the Ohio Valley Health Services · Foundation's proposed
emer ge ncy medi cal am·
bulance projec t.
Dan lloyd, a staff member of
lhe OVHS, said Koeplin, a
former chief of the Inter·
governmental services branch
of the state Department of
Urban Affairs, Is a tnan of
"great organization and a good
administrator which is needed
if the project Is to become a
reality."
Koeplin will begin his duties
immediately.
The proposed project iS now
in the planning stages· and
Lloyd sta ted that it was
progressing nicely. He said
approval has been granted .for
mos t of ·the monies allocated
and that the department is now
awaiting approval of . the

war but he did repeat his
(X'Omlse not to end It in a
manner which would. "stain"
American honor.
Nixon unveiled no new
(X'OIP'ama, but offered one
concrete election promlse-46
ll'y to reduce local property
taxes. White House domestic
adviser John D. Ehrlichman
aaid earner this week that
Nixon was shooting lor a 50 per
cent reduction.
'

request for ambulances lor the been advertised lor the com.
seven counties involved. The mu nic ation network whjch
counties included in the project manufacturers are working on .
The department already has
are Lawrence, Athens, Meigs,
Hoc kin g, Vinton, Jackson, hired a training officer who
Gallia.
will begin classes the second
A central location for the
week of September, to train
project has not yet been ambulance attendants : lloyd
determlned, but GaiUpolls is
said tha t some 430 people have
now one of the favored
to be trained and this phase
locations, according to
could perhaps be the most time
. Lloyd.
consuming stage in the project.
He stated th at the He added that upon state apavailability of land a nd proval the ambulances will be
economic feasibility are the · contrac ted and it was expected
main criteria which must be ·the first ambulances should
laken into consideration in arrive in the area by this Oc·
selection of a central site. He Iober.
added Gallipolis would be ideal
Once the 17 stations are in
because land Is available and full operation lloyd said it
there is easy access to a would be possible for any
communication network tower. family in the seven-county
lloyd stated that the com- area, no matter where they
munlcation network system reside, to receive emergency
could be in opera tion by medi cal service within 20
January. Bids have already minutes.

chairs ordered earlier lor six
classrooms have been shipped
and are expected to arrive "at
any time ,'' .

In other business, Sayre was
authorized to administer all
tiUe programs lor the 1972-73
school year. The board approved the purchase ofa water
cooler and the installation of a
telephone at the Portland
School. Billl Hoback was hired
to repair the furnace there.
All bus drivers of the district
met with the board to discuss
re-routing of students . Lynn
Hart was hired to repair wha t
is necessa ry at Portla nd
Elementary and Mrs. Robert
Ord, guidance counselor, was
given permission to attend the
GAPB testing program at
Medina on Aug. 31.
Mrs. Esther Wolfe was hired
as cook at the Portland School
and Sayre was given permission to purchase needed
janitorial supplies.
The board approved the
purchase of four desks and
chairs for the BOE program,
adopted an attendance
program for the high school,
hired Mrs. J udy Riggs to give
majore tle instruction, an d
gave Jennings Beegle permission to Install floor tile in
the junior hig h building.
COF CTOMEET
The Middleport Chamber of
Commerce wiU meet Friday,
Aug . 25, at 7:30 p. m. in the
Columbus and Southern Ohio
Electri c Company social
DI"OOIDS.

SEOAL Goes No Sudden Death
Southeastern Ohio Athletic
League 911iclals Wedm!sday
night voted 6-2 to continue the
league's policy of no "sudden·
death" periods to break
football game ties.
It was fell that the s~te·s
new · policy . permitting
breaking ties probably woilld
be changed alter this year.
The state's policy IJlllking
lloa'IIAad annwnced aU Ohio
high schoolll wOUld use a
sudden death rule to eUminate
ties In football. Howeyer, In the
face of apparent spirited op-

position the bl&gt;ard backed off to
announce the sudden death
practice would be optional with
individual schools and In
leagues.
William ' 'Bucky" Lockhart,
Wellston High School Principal, wlU lead the SEOAL
during the 1972-73 campaign.
I:.ockhart was elected president
during the annual fall meeting
held at the Coachea Inn In
Wellllton.
James Mains, Ironton , was
retained as th e league's
.aecretary-treasurer.

Charles Chancey, Melga
head football coach, wu appointed to prepare reserve,
:reshman and junior high
football schedules for 1972 and
1973.
Ed Stewart, GaUill Academy
athletic director, dlatrlbuted
schedules foe 1!172-73.. Dick
Myers, asslatant principal at
Ironton, will prepare the 1973
golf schedule.
•·
Stewart announced that the
annual league lrack meet will
be held May 2 at Rio Grande
College with Rio's Coach Art
Lanham, u meet nian~~~r.
.

'

Bob Shamp, principal at
Athens High School, recommended ·!hat the " AU Sports"
lrophy be presented to the
winning school at the team's
first home leasue game by the
opposing principal who wW
. represent the league. His
recommendation was accepted, Officials also accepted
the 'all league trophy provided ·
by Zlde's Sporting Goods ol
Marietta.
A committee was appointed

to ~~elect an all star bueball
team 1n tm.

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